Saturday, 31 August 2013

Happy Birthday Michael Jackson

Michael Jackson would have been 55 today.The king of pop,died four years ago,but his music and legacy live on.Here 's a look at some of the best Post coverage of jackson's Life and death,starring with a 1988 review of Jackson's performance at the capital center.


Michael Jackson in Motion: Jackson dazzles,Surprises at Capital Centre,Oct 14,1988

Michael Jackson Centre last night,he proved so interesting to watch that he could have sounded like Tiny Tim and nobody would have complained,Well,almost nobody,and since he sounded just like Michael ,it all worked out in the end. For all the good singing--and there was plenty of that it always seems to come back to movement and emotion with jackson,He is a dancer beyond compare,the  embodiment of perpetual motion principle,seemingly boneless,with lubricating oil in his veins.This is a man with more moves in a night than Nationwide has in a year.You could hate him,but you couldn't take your eyes off him

Michael Jackson's Music legacy will Endure,June 26,2009

Try,for a moment,to separate the art from the artist.Consider Michael Jackson's entertainment proffer in a vacuum-sealed space. In that bubble,where Bubbles and all the peculiarities and plastic surgeries matter not one whit,you will find a man and,if you go back far enough into the archives,a child--who was unquestionably one of the most  transcendent performers in  popular music.Jackson was singular talent,even if he was sometimes  derivative.He sang like Frankie Lymon by the way of smokey Robinson and Diana Ross,though his soulful,integrating voice sounded original and distinctive; to this day,it remain one of the most easily recognizable voices in the world

Friday, 30 August 2013

LifeStraw Personal Water Filter

A Time Magazine Invention of the Year winner, LifeStraw contains no chemicals, no batteries and no moving parts to wear out. It is perfect for the

  • ultralight backpacker
  •  camper
  •  hiker
  • traveler
  • boy scout
  • hunter  
  • for emergencies.

 The LifeStraw can filter up 264 gallons, and removes 99.99% of waterborne bacteria and waterborne protozoan parasites.

Wednesday, 28 August 2013

This is also Pakistan By CNN

This Is Also Pakistan!!
At the World's highest mountain range, its World best Heli-Skiers from Russia, Canada, France, Switzerland, Serbia discovering the completely undiscovered place of Pakistan.

The Hel-Ski Team Leader, Brice Lequertier says "Returning here would be a dream because what we discovered here flying around the last 2 days is basically that you could spend with full life or even 10 lifes discovering terrain here"

Voice Pakistan; From Foreigner's Eye thank you Saima Mohsin & CNN for stepping ahead to showcase a thrilling huge side of Winter Sports in Pakistan!!
 — withZsuzsanna Fajcsak DrZsu and Saima Mohsin at Karakoram Ranges, Pakistan.


Tuesday, 27 August 2013

Discovery Of New Element in Chemistry,having atomic Number 115

Scientists have presented new evidence for the existence of an unconfirmed element with atomic number
115.

Proposed:

First Proposed by Russian scientists in 2004, the super-heavy element has yet to verified by the governing body of the chemistry and physics.

Evidence:

The New evidence by a Swedish team is published in the journal Physical Review Letters.

''This was a very   successful experiment and is one of the most important in the field in recent years'',said Dirk Rudolph,professor at the division of the atomic physics at Lund University,Who led the search.
After the discovery of element 115,independent confirmation to measure the exact proton number was required,Prof Rudolp said.
He said the finding ''goes beyond the standard measurement''which had been observed previously. A new isotope of a potential new element was produced,which transformed into other particles via a radioactive process named alpha decay. The researchers also gained access to data that they say gives them a deeper  insight into the structure and properties of super-heavy atomic nuclei.

Experiment:

The team bombarded a thin film of the element americium with calcium ions,which allowed them to measure photons in connections with the new element's aplha decay.Certain energies of the phtotons agreed with the expected energies X-ray radiation.which acts as a ''fingerprint'' of a given element.The experiment was conducted at the GSI research facility in Germany,where scientists have previously discovered six other new elements.

Decision: 

The potential of new element will now be reviewed by a committee which consists of members of the international union of pure and applied chemistry and physics
They will decide whether to recommended further experiments before the discovery of the new element is acknowledged

10 robots invention that will blow your mind

Styrofoam Drone:

The Skate, created by Aurora Flight Sciences, is a $38,000 drone made mostly of Styrofoam. The 2-pound drone is launched by hand and can fly for 60 minutes. Piloted by a simple control system that vaguely resembles a Gameboy Advance, it can fly for more than two miles while transmitting video back to the pilot, either in the regular visual spectrum or in infrared. Because Skate is light and can be put into the air quickly, soldiers under fire could use its streaming video to scope out the battlefield from above.

Pop-up Drone:

Created by Bird Aerospace, the Bird’s Eye drone comes in a launch cylinder that fires it 300 feet into the air, where it self-assembles and then flies for up to three hours. Whoa. Its full range is over 40 miles, though it can only stream high-definition video back to a pilot from 20 or fewer miles away. Images from the flight can also be stored on board, and collected from an SD card in the drone is retrieved. It also has a Styrofoam body like the Skate, and it too launches quickly enough to be useful to soldiers on the battlefield.

Hybrid Drone:

This drone combines two common drone body types: quadrotors, which are great at taking off and landing vertically, but suck at flying forward quickly, and Predator-style push propellers, which are great at forward momentum but require a runway for takeoff and landing. This vehicle, from Latitude Engineering Group, is the best of both worlds. Four rotors, powered by electrical motors, let the drone take off and land vertically, which means it requires only a very small launch site. A propeller for thrust, powered by a gas engine, sends the drone zooming forward. This one has up to 15 hours of endurance and can carry a small camera or sensor system. There’s a larger version in the works, and I’m excited about the potential. Anywhere than can launch a helicopter could launch drones like this, meaning even modest helicopter carriers could suddenly sport large drone fleets to scout the ocean. This drone took two stale designs and combined them into something with a lot more flexibility, and it feels genuinely new.

Sonar Drone:

Created by Toyon, the PescadAero is a flying sonar buoy. The drone flies to a river or coastal area, and then lands in the water. The head of the drone houses two systems—a camera for navigating and a sonar for underwater sensing. When the drone lands on the water, the head rotates 90 degrees, so the camera stays above the water and the sonar drops below the surface. Once there, the the sonar sweeps the ocean (or river) floor in wide swaths. It can map out the floor of a river as it drifts downstream, or might ride the tide and plot out underwater mines for a navy. When its task is complete, PescadAero can take off vertically from the water and fly home.

Matrix Software:

The Sikorsky Matrix software is designed to give unmanned helicopters some autonomy; not to replace pilots, but to make flying easier for them. Sikorsky outfitted a commercial helicopter with the software and started test flights in July. The goal is to reduce helicopter crashes, while at the same time freeing the pilot for other tasks while in flight. To do that, the aircraft needs a degree of autonomy, and needs to fly more safely than drones usually do. Unmanned aircraft themselves don’t have a great crash record—they crash at a rate of about one per 1,000 flight hours. The aim of Matrix is to reduce that to one per 100,000 flight hours, and thus create a robot helicopter that people are comfortable riding in. Ultimately this could enable a remotely piloted medical evacuation helicopter, where the humans on board tend to injuries while the machine flies itself to a hospital.

Underwater-Fish Robot:

This is a scale model of Boston Engineering’s underwater fish robot, dubbed Ghost Swimmer. It swims like a tuna, propelling itself silently through the sea. It can carry sonar, making it a useful underwater scout for things like underwater mines and submarines. The project has received funding from the Office of Naval Research, and the Department of Homeland Security has expressed interest, too.

Self-Driving Car Kit:

Created by Southwest Research Institute, the item on display here is really just the cameras on top of the car and the software that powers them. With eight cameras in four pairs pointed outwards, the autonomous driving system can recognize the landscape around it, identifying dirt roads and grass fields to drive through and trees to avoid. Drivers can turn the system on or off depending on when he or she wants the robot to take the wheel. For the military, this means a vehicle could steer its passengers out of danger even with an injured driver

Future Martian:

Students at Worchester Polytechnic Institute built this machine for a robotics challenge project. The Autonomous Exploration RObot (AERO) is designed to collect samples for NASA on Mars. The robot has four cameras for surveying its surroundings, a surprisingly human-like arm, and multiple slots on its back to store samples. In theory, it would work like a little brother to the Curiosity rover, picking up and analyzing interesting rocks on distant planets.

Blimp-Like Glider:

The gasoline-powered Nimbus EOS XI is part hang glider, part ultralight aircraft, and part blimp. It flies at only 15 miles per hour, which makes it perfect for slowly and carefully surveying an area. The 120-pound drone can fly for up to 90 minutes at 9,000 feet above sea level carrying a high-definition camera.

Robo-Arm:

Yup, this is an arm mounted on wheels. Made by HDT Global, the Adroit Arm Systemdraws on human prosthetics to create a more useful robot limb. I once watched a bomb-squad robot spend 10 minutes trying to grab a stick. A more articulate hand could do the job much faster. It has an opposable thumb, which was scary in a robot-takeover way until it messed up stacking letter blocks; then it just looked like a sad toddler with a 40-pound grip. Okay, still scary.

Syria chemical attack undeniable, says John Kerry

US Secretary of State John Kerry has condemned what he said was the "undeniable" use of chemical weapons by the Syrian government. He described recent attacks in the Damascus area as a "moral obscenity". The US and its allies are considering a response including possible military strikes on Syria, although Russia - Syria's ally - has warned against this. Earlier on Monday, United Nations chemical weapons inspectors were fired on while investigating the attacks. The team came under sniper fire while travelling to one of the five sites around Damascus where hundreds of people were reported to have been killed on 21 August. The Syrian government has denied launching any chemical attacks and instead blamed rebel fighters.  "What we saw in Syria last week should shock the conscience of the world. It defies any code of morality," Mr Kerry said at a news conference on Monday. "Make no mistake, President Obama believes there must be accountability for those who would use the world's most heinous weapons against the world's most vulnerable people." The US administration had additional information about the attacks that it would make public in the days ahead, he added. Mr Kerry said the delay in allowing UN inspectors to the sites was a sign the Syrian government had something to hide. "Instead it attacked the area further, shelling it and systematically destroying evidence. That is not the behaviour of a government that has nothing to hide. The regime's belated decision to allow access is too late and is too late to be credible," Mr Kerry said. Later, US White House Spokesman Jay Carney echoed Mr Kerry's comments, saying: "There is very little doubt in our mind that the Syrian regime is culpable."
UN chemical weapons experts visit people affected by an apparent gas attack at a hospital in the south-western Damascus suburb of Mouadamiya on 26 August 2013 UN inspectors spoke to doctors and survivors of the attack in two hospitals Syrian President Bashar al-Assad warned the US against military intervention in an interview with Russian newspaper Izvestiya on Monday. "If someone is dreaming of making Syria a puppet of the West, then this will not happen," he said. Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov also told reporters on Monday the West had not produced any proof that President Assad's forces had used chemical weapons. He was responding to suggestions from some Western countries that military action against the Syrian government could be taken without a UN mandate. Mr Lavrov said the use of force without Security Council backing would be "a crude violation of international law". The UN Security Council is divided, with Russia and China opposing military intervention and the UK and France warning that the UN could be bypassed if there was "great humanitarian need". Washington has recently bolstered its naval presence in the eastern Mediterranean and military leaders from the US, UK and their allies have convened a meeting in Jordan. Analysts believe the most likely US action would be sea-launched cruise missiles targeting Syrian military installations. Earlier on Monday, a UN convoy came under fire by unidentified snipers and was forced to turn back to their central Damascus hotel before resuming their journey to the western district of Muadhamiya. The rebels accused government forces of the attack, while Syrian state media blamed "terrorists". While neither claim could be verified, UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon condemned the shooting and asked the UN team in Syria to register a complaint. "I have instructed [UN disarmament chief] Angela Kane to register a strong complaint to the Syrian government and authorities of opposition forces so that this will never happen and the safety and security of the investigation teams will be secured from tomorrow," he said, speaking from South Korea. He said the UN team had interviewed witnesses, survivors and doctors as well as collected some samples from two hospitals in the district. The inspectors are also due to visit areas in the eastern suburbs of Ghouta. The UN says more than 100,000 people have been killed since the uprising against President Assad began more than two years ago. The conflict has produced more than  1.7 million registered refugees.

Monday, 26 August 2013

Side effects of Mobile Phones

Bad effects of Mobile phones.A scientist showed with simple examples


Mobile Danger by zemvideos

Who Invented Facebook?

Facebook was invented by Mark Zuckerberg.

Hot or Not?

 Facebook was invented by Harvard computer science student Mark Zuckerberg, along with classmates Eduardo Saverin, Dustin Moskovitz, and Chris Hughes. The origins to the name hints as to the history of Facebook, however, the website was originally and briefly called Facemash. Mark Zuckerberg was a second year student, when he wrote the software for the Facemash website. Perhaps, it was Zuckerberg's sophomoric sense of humor that led him to create the site as a type of "hot or not" game for Harvard students, where website visitors could compare two student photos side-by-side and let viewers decide who was "hot" and who was "not". Mark Zuckerberg put his computer science skills to good use by hacking into Harvard's security network and where he copied the student ID images used by the dormitories and used them to populate his Facemash website. Fashmash opened on October 28, 2003,and closed a few days later, shut down by Harvard execs. Mark Zuckerberg faced charges of breach of security, violating copyrights, and violating individual privacy for stealing the student photos he used to populate the site. He also faced expulsion from Harvard University for his actions. However, all charges were eventually dropped.

TheFacebook

 On February 4, 2004, Mark Zuckerberg relaunched with a new website "Thefacebook". Six days later, Mark Zuckerberg again faced trouble when three Harvard seniors, Cameron Winklevoss, Tyler Winklevoss, and Divya Narendra, accused Zuckerberg of stealing their ideas for an intended social network website called HarvardConnection, and of using their ideas for TheFacebook. Winklevoss, Winklevoss, and Narendra later filed a lawsuit against Zuckerberg, however, the matter was settled out of court. Membership to the website was at first restricted to Harvard College students. Zuckerberg enlisted a few of his fellow students to help grow the website: Eduardo Saverin worked on business, Dustin Moskovitz as a programmer, Andrew McCollum as a graphic artist, and Chris Hughes. Together the team expanded the site to additional universities and colleges.

 Facebook 

In 2004, an angel investor, Sean Parker (founder of Napster) became the company's president. The company changed the name from TheFacebook to just Facebook after purchasing the domain name facebook.com in 2005 for $200,000. Mark Zuckerberg's antics finally did pay off when profits from Facebook made him the world's youngest multi-billionaire. Kudos goes to Zuckerberg for spreading the wealth around, according to the NYTimes, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg donated $100 million dollars to the Newark, New Jersey public school system, which has long been underfunded.

Mike Tyson 'close to death from drugs and alcohol'

Mike Tyson,former undisputed heavy weight world champion,claims he is ''on the edge of death'' because of using drug and alcohol problems,which he didn't still left.Mike Tyson,born in 1967, admitted he is a continual substance abuser but he is hopeful of finally getting clean.''I want to live a sober life. I don't want to die.I'm on the verge of dying,because I'm a vicious alcoholic'',Tyson said on ESPN's Friday Night Fights''



I'm a bad guy sometimes. I did a lot of bad things, I want to be forgiven.''


In 1987, the American fighter held the record as the youngest  boxer to win the WBC,WBA and IBF heavyweight titles.But,five years  later Brooklyn-born Tyson was convicted of raping desire Washington and sentenced to six years in prison.
He returned to the ring but retired from the sport in 2006 and n 2007 was sentenced to 24 hours in jail and 360 hours of community service for drug possession and driving under the influence.Tyson,who now works as a boxing promoter, added:''I hope they can forgive me. I want to change my life, I want to live a different life now.I have not drank or took drugs in six days and for me that's a miracle.
I have been lying to everyday that thinks I was sober, but I'm not. This is my sixth day. I'm never going to use again''

''I hope they can forgive me, I want to live a different life now''

Winners and Losers of NASCAR Sprint Cup Series at Bristol


Forty-three Cars, a half-mile having little length and plenty of need for postseason posturing all but guarantees that NASCAR sprint Cup Series drivers and teams will leave Bristol Motor Speedway's August night race either fuming in frustration or smiling in pleasure. Saturday night provided no shortage of either.
With a Still-new method of racing around the top of the track's concrete high-banks adding to the tension, Matt Kenseth drove to the win with an impressive display to again hold Kasey Kahne back from a win.There were also 11 cautions for 74 of the 500 laps,meaning there were plenty of teams who left scowling from opportunities lost.
All told,it was another classic NASCAR night at Bristol. Click to find out who left smiling and who didn't.




Who Invented YouTube?


YouTube was invented by Steve Chen, Chad Hurley and Jawed Karim out of a garage in Menlo Park. The inventors became millionaires when they sold their invention for 1.65 billion dollars to the search engine Google.
According to their fact sheet, YouTube was founded in February 2005, as a destination to watch and share original videos worldwide through the Web. Users can upload and share video clips on www.YouTube.com and YouTube enables video embedding that allows YouTube videos to be placed on non-YouTube pages.

YouTube Inventor - Steve Chen

Steve Chen was born in 1978 in Taiwan and immigrated to the United States when he was 15. He was educated at the University of Illinois and and after graduation found employment at PayPal, where he met his fellow YouTube co-inventors and co-founders Chad Hurley and Jawed Karim. Currently, Steve Chen serves as the Chief Technology Officer at YouTube.

YouTube Inventor - Chad Hurley

Born in 1977, Chad Hurley received a Bachelors degree in Fine Art from the University of Pennsylvania and was later employed eBay’s PayPal division. Currently, Chad Hurley serves as the Chief Executive Officer at YouTube and is considered a whiz at user interface design. As a sidenote: Hurley designed Paypal's trademark logo.

YouTube Inventor - Jawed Karim

Jawed Karim also worked at Paypal, where he meet his future corporate cohorts. However, Karim has also pursued an advanced degree at Stanford University and is considered the elusive member of the threesome. According to Jawed Karim the inspiration for YouTube came from the halftime faux pas committed by Janet Jackson and Justin Timberlake, when Janet’s breast was accidently exposed. Karim could not easily find that video clip online and then a few others. Not a problem he would have today.

BMW launches Eco-friendly i3 SUV



Stars including Sienna Miller and James Franco were spotted at the launch of new BMW Eco-friendly i3, also named as the world’s most futuristic electric car. All these stars were invited to the launch of the most-promising Eco-friendly automobile motoring at under 2p a mile. This futuristic –looking automobile is believed to be one of the most important in the history of the German manufacturers. It was launched simultaneously in London, Beijing and New York.
Now coming to the appearance and features of the cars, the dimensions of this marvel are measured up to be; a length of 13’1”, a width of 5’9” and a height of 5’3”. While weighing less than 1.2 tons, the shape of the car is very stylish. With outward opening clamshell doors and the classic BMW looks, this car promises spectacular things. In the interior, many conventional dials are replaced with hi-tech screens.  The fully electric car promises 100 miles in just a 2£ full battery recharge. According to the engineers at BMW, the fuel economy is equivalent to a gas fuelled car, doing almost 425 miles a gallon, they added, while a partially charged battery on an overnight charge will cost only 1.6p per mile.


In her interview to MailOnline, Sienna said: ‘Being a new mother, I feel it’s very important to make green choices and create a better world for the future. It’s the perfect city car’. BMW’s global sales and marketing director Dr Ian Robertson said, ‘the i3 has re-written the rule book. After 100 years of landlines the mobile telephone opened up so many opportunities and changed the face of the communications industry. Electric vehicles will do the same for individual mobility. The car has been around for 130 years and today marks a change in the future of mobility. One thing the i3 will share with every other BMW is sheer driving pleasure.’ Another smart feature is the connection of car’s systems to the driver’s smart phone, that may allow him to access the info, like the battery left and how many miles can he travel more before the car requires a recharge and which recharge systems are nearby etc . One other feature is that one can track where he parked his car by the guidance provided through the app while he’s on foot. That is surely a blessing for the forgetful ones. The i3 itself features a smart system. It informs the driver of the nearby charging stations, helps him finding a parking space and can also get you the train schedules. The ‘DRA – Driving Range Assistant’ linked to the car’s sat-nav will inform the driver if the battery is sufficient to reach his destination. If it isn’t, the DRA can help in finding a better alternate route or direct the driver to a charging station. It even takes traffic jams and slope climbing and start-stop situations in account while measuring the battery for your voyage.

Memory weakens but steadies with age, study finds

ISLAMABAD (Online): Forgetting things seems to be a part of getting older which everyone accepts. But could the confidence of the young be covering up their own memory slips? Older people were more consistent in memory tests, research from Germany shows - although younger people did achieve overall higher test scores. The assessments were carried out in Berlin on 100 older people - aged between 65 and 80 - and 100 people in their 20s. They had to show up at the Max Planck Institute for Human Development in Berlin for 100 days of tests. "We were very nice to them and had a good atmosphere at the labs," says Prof Florian Schmiedek. "People got to know each other, it was kind of a social activity for them. And we also paid them for those 100 days." The brain remembers things by forming connections between its 100 billion neurons or brain cells. Memories are formed when these connections - or synapases - are strengthened. Information from the senses is sent to the brain's cortex, and then on to parts surrounding an area called the hippocampus. These 'bind' the memory together, before it is sent to the hippocampus itself, where information about context or location is added. "Working" memory - crucial for solving problems and making plans - is like a blackboard of the mind, located in the prefrontal cortex of the brain. It is used to remember phone numbers long enough to make a call - but then it is usually forgotten unless it is passed on to the long-term memory for storage. The tasks were designed to test different types of memory. In one, the participants had to remember a list of words. Another had a list of numbers to memorise while simultaneously carrying out simple arithmetic on those numbers - to challenge their "working" memory. Wide variability The overall scores for older people were lower than the twenty-somethings. It has long been known that cognitive performance drops as we age, with some loss of cells in the brain. But Dr Carol Holland, director of the Research Centre for Healthy Ageing at the University of Aston in Birmingham, says we forget a lot less than we think we do. "Long-term memory doesn't change in normal old age, we are just as good at remembering poetry learned as a child. Learning new things - that's where differences start to show. "But there is lots of variability - one 80-year-old might learn just as quickly as a 19-year-old. Another 80-year-old might have real problems." Dr Holland said the findings were encouraging in countering the stereotypes about older people being forgetful - and a reminder that ageing might not be at the root of the problem. "An older person might attribute losing their keys to just having celebrated their 70th birthday - when really they might have always had problems with forgetting where they've put things." Prof Schmiedek says the size of the study helped him to show that good and bad days exist. "But that the variability is not as large as one might expect. It's more of a moment-to-moment fluctuation in performance that often creates the impression that we have good and bad days." Prof Schmiedek whose research was published in the journal Psychological Science, was surprised by the difference between the two groups. "If we compare younger and older adults, the interesting finding was that across the nine tasks older people fluctuated less day to day." As well as testing their memory, the team also gave participants questionnaires to assess their mood. Older adults appeared to be more motivated to do well in the tasks and worried less about life and its stresses.

Reality Of beggars revealed in karachi Pakistan

Karachi:Sar-e-Aam program revealed the reality of beggars in karachi Pakistan.How the Beggars are managing this task by area and by contractor

Sar e Aam - 25th August 2013 by Malik_Jee

Sunday, 25 August 2013

Wasim Akram ties the knot with Shaniera Thompson

KARACHI: Famed Pakistan paceman Wasim Akram on Wednesday announced that he had married his Australian girlfriend, Shaniera Thompson, saying he has started a new life on a happy note.
"I married Shaniera in Lahore last week in a simple ceremony and this is the start of a new life for me, my wife and for my kids," Wasim told AFP.
The 47-year-old's first wife Huma died in 2009 after multiple organ failure.
Wasim proposed to 30-year-old Thompson, a former public relations consultant, on bended knee last month.
Thompson came to Karachi earlier this month before going to Lahore to see Wasim's ailing father, where the marriage was solemnised.
Wasim said Thompson had converted to Islam and is learning Urdu. "She has embraced Islam and is learning our language. She has been close to my sons and they form a very good bond," said Wasim of his two sons from his first marriage.
Wasim played 104 Tests and 356 one-day internationals for Pakistan in a career lasting from 1984 to 2003.
He was regarded as one of the best left-arm fast bowlers to have played the game and remains a major celebrity in Pakistan.
Wasim was player of the tournament in the country's only triumph in the World Cup, in Australia in 1992. He captained Pakistan to a runners-up finish in the 1999 World Cup in England.
According to sources a grand reception will be held in September or November

Ohio man declared dead, comes back to life 45 minutes later

OHIO: Doctors have declared an Ohio man a walking miracle, and his story has stunned medical circles nationwide. On August 5th, Tony Yahle was legally declared dead. Doctors had exhausted all attempts to revive a heartbeat - they had given up. An entire 45 minutes went by when Yahle suddenly showed signs of life. Doctors say there is no medical explanation. Yahle believes it was divine intervention. "It definitely strengthen my faith, my family's faith, everybody I know's faith," Yahle said. "And like I said, if it strengthens everybody's faith then I'll take the lumps for it." Yahle has been home for a week now, and says he feels just fine

Muslims are not terrorist and check the reality!

Muslims are not terrorist and check the reality.Here is a inspirational video about Muslims

COUP DE FILET - [Spot Officiel] from Detournage

Saturday, 24 August 2013

CNN reporter assaulted on live TV in Mumbai, India

India:A private news journalist Sara Sidner assaulted on a live TV in Mumbai,India.


CNN reporter assaulted on live TV in Mumbai, India from CNN

Wednesday, 21 August 2013

KPK govt. to establish two modern mega cities



Chief Minister of of KPK,Pervez Khattak has decided to establish to mega cities in KPK.One of them will be along Peshawar-Islamabad Motorway near Colonel Sher Khan Interchange and other at Abbotabad, which would have have all modern facilities.
''It was the vision of PTI chairman Imran Khan to provide modern residential facilities to the people of KPK at affordable prices''said,Pervez  khattak
Chief Minister directed the authorities  concerned to prepare the final plan of this important project within 15 days so that it could be approved formally

Facilities:

  • Modern Civil facilities 
  • Complex (Education,Medical)
  • Five star hotel
  • Commercial Zone
  • Police Stations
  • Mosques
  • Apartments
  • Golf Course 
  • Theme Park
  • Fuel Pumps
  • Playgrounds
  • Green Belts
  • Wide Roads
  • Electricity
  • Sui Gas
  • Water Filtration Plants
  • It'ill serve the the population of over 602,130
Hope it will the first step towards KPK Progrss.
         

Punjab Police learn to use digital mapping to tackle crime


Police officials have been given smartphones loaded with an application designed by the Punjab Information Technology Board (PITB) and taught how to use it to map incidents of crime. The board has handed out a total of 83 phones, one to each police station.
Crime Records Office SP Mustafa Hameed Malik told The Express Tribune that three or four Police Record and Office Management Information System (Promis) personnel at each station had been taught to use the smartphone app.
The app allows policemen to enter the FIR number, date of occurrence, time, description and area of jurisdiction for each crime, as well as pictures of the crime scene and the complainant, and mark it on a Google map of Lahore using the GPS in the phone. The data is stored directly to the PITB database web server in real time, currently accessible only to the Investigations DIG and the CRO SP, police sources said.
A source at the PITB said that the main database server shows Google maps marked with the crime data sent from the field by police personnel on their smartphones. A satellite view from 300 metres above ground level shows the place and name of the crime committed. A bubble appears at the spot, upon clicking which the user can see the data entered about the crime and the pictures.

Crimes can be viewed on the map separately or collectively. “The proximity of different crimes in particular areas helps police understand crime trends better, and thus helps devise appropriate strategies to fight them,” said Investigations DIG Zulfiqar Hameed.
He said that the crime mapping was “the first step towards smart policing. It will reduce the crime rate in the city to an extent that will be felt by everyone within six or seven months.”
The training of policemen for the project began on July 31 and 2,500 cases have been marked on the crime map since then. The PITB sources said that personnel at 15 of the 83 police stations in the city had yet to start mapping crimes due to technical problems.
The 83 phones provided to the police came from the PITB, as the Punjab government has not yet approved funds for the project. The PITB sources said that the phones were given to the board by the Punjab government during the elections in order to gauge voting trends.
“As soon as the government approves the PC-1 for the crime mapping project, the PITB will be returned the phones,” said the DIG.
The PC-1, seeking some Rs180 million for the project, has been prepared by the Lahore police and sent to the Planning Commission for approval, he said. Both the chief minister of the Punjab and the prime minister have applauded the project, he added.
Hotspots
The DIG said that incidents of crime were not spread evenly on the map. Clusters he called hotspots accounted for a disproportionate number of crimes.
“The appeal of focusing limited resources on a small number of high crime activity places is straightforward. If we can prevent crime at hotspot locations, then we might be able to reduce total crime,” he said. “Hotspot policing is a big plank of smart policing.” The mapping would allow police to deal with crime “surgically” and would end random patrols, Hameed said. Recent research showed that focused police interventions, such as directed patrols, proactive arrests, and problem-oriented policing were far more effective than random patrolling and picketing, he added.
Hameed said that the new smart policing policy was based on CompStat (comparative statistics or computer statistics), a police management and accountability system originally developed by the New York Police Department and now in use in most of North America.
The model seeks to focus police organisations on specific problems and empower them to identify and solve them. “Given the growing popularity of this approach to crime prevention across the world, it can help executives and policymakers understand what works in preventing crime in hot spot areas,” he said.
SP Mustafa Malik said that a pilot project at four police stations had had positive results. It showed that Gulshan-i-Iqbal Park alone accounted for six per cent of car theft in Lahore.
“Just by focusing on that particular hotspot, we managed to reduce the rate of car theft in the city. Foot patrols followed by patrol maintenance resulted in significant reductions in calls for service. The enforcement of a problem-oriented policing strategy also resulted in significant reductions in total crime incidents, and varying reductions in all subcategories of crime types,” he said.
He added that extra policemen would be deployed in the 10 areas with the most crimes.
Crimes Investigation Agency SP Umer Virk said that the project would have great practical use. “Police officers know the locations in their beats that tend to be trouble spots and are often very sensitive to the signs of potential crimes across their beats. Pinning crime activities on digital maps with dates, times and exact locations will enhance police performance.”
Published in The Express Tribune, August 18th, 2013.

Amazing world now you can buy Made in China AC Air-Conditioned Vests Keep Chinese Factory Workers Cool

In China and other countries having high temperature round the year,worker are unable to show their full abilities.This  thing really effect the company's production and hence country will  also.In Order to overcome the situation,Chinese engineers  were working on special vest which can help worker,even in the hotter part of factory.Now someday ago,they got success to make vest which will give cooling to worker during their work.They named it AC VEST,which has the ability to decrease the temperature about 20 degrees.

''It means that  at 40'C when someone wearing the vest  then he feels like as if it were 20 'C''
''Wang Yan, a 4 year old business man in Nantong,Jiangsu province,Invented the Vest.He devised as it if temperature of atmosphere  is 40 degrees then  Vest can lower the temperature,of human skin to about 20 degrees.
Wang opened a factory to make the vests,and he has  sold about 4,000 of them in the last three months-40 percent more than last year.

Mechanism:




  •  The Vest is made of impermeable fabric to lock in the cool air.Cool air is distributed through small tubes with tiny holes that are inside the vest.
  • Compressed air is delivered into the vortex tube,swirls quickly and forms a funneled airflow,like a tornado,causing hot air to sink and cool air to float.
  • Then cool air stream is distributed through the vest wang originally wrapped the cool air tubes and around him when he worked.He later managed to integrate the tube into vest.
  • Inventer  then continued renovating the vest to make it cooler.
  • The valves on each side of the tube,One control the inflow of compressed air and the other controls the cool air output with which the user can regulate the temperature


''Normally when the temperature is around 35 degrees C ,the vest can lower it to about 25 c in 30 second''

Nuclear Powered Cars Can Soon Be A Reality!



One Thing which is quite obvious is the fact that no matter which profession you are in,Science is improving.Engineers are working round the clock to deliver you the best and hat too at an economical price and comfortabe. Everything in the world is improving as medical experiments being carried out and military work is in progress and tons of gadgets are coming to market,everyone is unique and wonderful
''A car that will not require fuel for over hundred of years''

What we are looking at today is a concept car which debuted at Chicago Auto Show; The Cadillac World Thorium Fueled Concept Car. Why is the car such a contribution to the society? It is less toxic and is, theoretically speaking, capable of going for a hundred years without requiring any fuel refilling. Now comes the actual news; it is supposed to run on ‘Thorium’ which will power it via onboard nuclear reactor. There was no working model of the nuclear reactor but it was claimed that the technology is within reach. Charles Stevens, MIT researcher R&D firm Laser Power Systems, is working on a prototype version of the reactor where a thorium powered laser will generate enough energy to power the car without emitting any harmful gases. The idea is to employ ‘MaxFelaser’ which will be used to convert water into pressurized steam that would spin a turbine and generate electricity. The system is capable of generating 250 Kilowatts. That is equivalent of 335 horsepower. The reactor will weight about 500 pounds and can easily fit under the hood. The idea sure is impressive, but frankly, how realistic do we find it? Not very much; think of the safety concerns if you have nuclear reactors under the hood of your car! Also, such systems are quite realistic when we talk in terms of size but there has yet been no successful fusion of the reactor and car so far.

However, the idea is there and work is being done upon it so we can very much expect a successful fusion soon enough and imagine a car that doesn’t require fuel for over a hundred years and has a zero emission rate; pretty slick, also the car’s design sure look pretty slick. Fingers crossed and we really do hope this idea comes out as a success and they can come up with a solution regarding the safety concerns.

iPhone 5S and 5C: Everything You Need to Know About the Next iPhone

"When is the next iPhone coming out?" "Should I wait for the nextiPhone or just get one now?" "And why would I want the next iPhone to read my fingerprint?"
It happens to me every year around this time -- a deluge of questions about the next iPhone.
And the timing of the rumors and interest makes sense. For the past two years, Apple has released a new iPhone in September, which means that many are preparing for a long-anticipated upgrade. And yes, according to reports, Apple is now gearing up for its annual September iPhone event where it is expected to release the successor to the iPhone 5 -- presumably the iPhone 5S -- and another phone called the iPhone 5C.
Yes, Apple is rumored to be releasing not one but two iPhones this year.
For those who have questions about the next iPhone, when it is coming and if you should wait, you've come to the right place: Here's a guide just for you. Yes, you. Here's everything we've dug out about Apple's next phones, keeping in mind that Apple has declined to comment on all of the following reports or speculation.

The iPhone 5S

The iPhone 4S is to the iPhone 4 as the iPhone 5S is to the iPhone 5. No, this isn't the SATs, but just as the iPhone 4S had a similar design to the iPhone 4 but with a few new features, the iPhone 5 is expected to follow a similar pattern. Don't expect a bigger screen on iPhone 5S, even though Apple seems to be cooking that up too. According to various reports, the iPhone 5S will have a very similar design to the iPhone 5, but will have the following changes.
Fingerprint sensor
Siri was the standout feature of the iPhone 4S, and all signs point to a fingerprint sensor as the standout feature of the 5S. According to various reports, including one recently from 9to5Mac, the iPhone 5S will have a fingerprint sensor in the circular home button.
And there's more supporting evidence for this. Last year Apple bought AuthenTec, a biometrics reader and mobile security solutions company, and a folder called "biometrickitUI" was recently found in the iOS 7 software code. "A fingerprint that changes color during the setup process" was also written in the software.
Mark Gurman of 9to5Mac wrote this week that according to his sources, the reader would be in the home button and work better than some competing solutions that have appeared on other smartphones, such as the Motorola Atrix.
But here's a question: Why would you want to have a fingerprint sensor on a phone, iPhone or not? The hardware feature would be a way to "authenticate" you and offer another way of securing your phone. It would also likely offer an alternative to entering a PIN or password. Apple has also already said that iOS 7, the next version of the iPhone software, has more security or authentication features to protect against iPhone thefts or Apple picking. For instance, one feature requires you to input your Apple ID before resetting the device.
Improved processor and camera
Much less is known about the other hardware improvements, but according to some sources, the phone will have a new version of Apple's processor (presumably called the A7), which will naturally be faster and more efficient, aiding with battery life. It's also expected to pack an improved camera, which Apple Insider reporting that will have an a better flash for taking better photos in low-light conditions.
Gold
According to various outlets, including TechcrunchAllThingsDiMore, and 9to5Mac, the next iPhone will come in a new color. A gold model will join the current black and white iPhone models. It seems, though, that this being Apple, we're not talking a gaudy, blinged-out gold but a more tempered champagne color.

The iPhone 5C

But that's not all we're going to hear about colors. There is speculation that there will be another, more affordable iPhone: the iPhone 5C. The C is said to stand not for cheap but for colors. According to various leaked photos, the iPhone 5C is made of plastic and will come in various hues, including green, pink, white, blue and yellow. Australian blogger Sonny Dickson has published a number of photos of the purported back shell of the phone.
Because the phone is made of plastic, versus the aluminum and metal materials used for the iPhone 5 (or 5S), it is expected that the phone will be more affordable than the 5S, which will presumably start at $199 with a two-year contract. Apple experts, including John Gruber of Daring Fireball, have suggested that the 5C will replace the lower-cost iPhones on the market, such as the iPhone 4 or 4S. (Apple usually drops prices on older phones when a new model is released.)

The Software

Apple has not commented on any of the aforementioned hardware rumors, but it has mentioned something that is coming to the iPhone: iOS 7. In June, Apple showed off the completely revamped version of its iPhone and iPad operating system. The software has been given a complete face-lift, with new icons, animations and features.
Specifically there is a new Control Center area, finally making it easier to get to frequently used settings, including Wi-Fi and screen brightness. The multitasking view is also new, with a card view that lets you swipe to close apps.
We've highlighted a few more of the new features coming to iOS 7 here. And don't just swipe away the importance of the software this year. Even if you don't buy a new iPhone, the new version of iOS will change the look and feel of older models.

The Release Date

"When is the next iPhone coming out?"
Ah yes, the big question I have been asked for months. According to AllThingsD, Apple is planning to hold an event on Sept. 10. If all follows Apple's past scheduling, that would put the iPhone on shelves a week and a half later, around Sept. 20. The Wall Street Journal also reported that Apple was on schedule to ship a "new high-end and low-end iPhone in early September."
But, of course, until Apple takes the stage most of this is just rumor and speculation. Apple CEO Tim Cook and Apple's Senior Vice President of Design Jony Ive have the real answers to the flood of iPhone questions I get every year, but I'm confident in saying this: A new iPhone is coming and, yes, you should wait.
Sources(Yahoo.com)