Tuesday, October 5, 2010

Thursday, April 22, 2010

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“Big tasks are easier if broken up into smaller manageable pieces."



  • We need to continue the drive for an international treaty and do so with the renewed urgency.
  • We need to take the argument back to skeptic and make the powerful, convincing, and necessary case about the climate change much clear to everyone.
  • We should help people prevent and cope with flooding, environmental degradation, water depletion, and pollution.
  • We should now work as hard as we can to build these up into more specific commitments over the coming months.
  • The consequences of our negligence would hit our innocent descendants with full force.

  • We can and must act urgently if we are to limit and eventually halt the impacts of climate change on human communities and natural eco systems.






Earth Day:

Forty years after the first Earth Day, the world is in greater peril than ever. While climate change is the greatest challenge of our time, it also presents the greatest opportunity – an unprecedented opportunity to build a healthy, prosperous, clean energy economy now and for the future.

Earth Day 2010 can be a turning point to advance climate policy, energy efficiency, renewable energy and green jobs. Earth Day Network is galvanizing millions who make personal commitments to sustainability. Earth Day 2010 is a pivotal opportunity for individuals, corporations and governments to join together and create a global green economy. Join the more than one billion people in 190 countries that are taking action for Earth Day.

I hope you will believe this and follow friends.

Thursday, April 15, 2010

Recollect Your Memories:

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Jogging boosts brain power:

The study led by Cambridge University showed that running triggered the growth of hundreds of thousands of new brain cells in a region that is linked to the formation and recollection of memories.

“We know exercise can be good for healthy brain function, but this work provides us with a mechanism for the effect,” the Telegraph quoted Timothy Bussey, a behavioral neuroscientist at Cambridge and the study’s senior author as telling the Guardian.

During the study, researchers followed two groups of mice, one of which had unlimited access to a running wheel throughout, whey they clocked up an average of 15 miles (24km) a day, while the other mice formed a control group.






The mice were placed in front of a computer screen, which displayed two identical squares side by side. According to the study, if they nudged the one on the left with their nose they received a sugar pellet reward. If they nudged the one on the right, they got nothing. They were then subjected to a memory test where the more they nudged the correct square, the better they scored.

The findings revealed that the running mice scored nearly twice as high as the control group during the memory test.

However, the greatest improvement occurred in the later stages of the experiment, when the two squares were so close they nearly touched.

“At this stage of the experiment, the two memories the mice are forming of the squares are very similar,” Bussey said.

“It is when they have to distinguish between the two that these new brain cells really make a difference,” he added.

The Bottom Line:

“Jogging boosts brain power”. These words are giving me relief friends. I think you can remember your 50 years old friend easily if you go for a jog daily. So from today start jogging and create wonders.



Monday, April 12, 2010

"Young Superheroes in a Hut":

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"Why is Africa Poor?"





Why is Africa poor? Is it a legacy of diseases and parasites? Or is it that local mammals, zebra and the African elephant, were difficult to domesticate and harness in agriculture?

There’s truth in each of these explanations. But a visit to Zimbabwe highlights perhaps the main reason: “Bad Governance.” The tyrannical, incompetent and corrupt rule of Zimbabwe’s President, Robert Mugabe, has turned one of the Africa’s most advanced countries into a shambles.

This was the article written by a journalist who had a trip across Africa. He says like this “In a village less than a day’s drive from Victoria falls, I stumbled across a hut that to me captured the country’s heart break and also its resilience and hope. The only people living in the hut are five children, orphans from two families. The children aged 8 to 17 moved in together after their four parents died of AIDS and other causes.

The head of the house was the oldest boy, Abel a gangly 10th grader with a perpetual grin. He has been in charge since he was 15. At one time, the two families reflected Zimbabwe’s relative prosperity. One mother was a business woman who travelled abroad regularly. One of the fathers was a soccer coach who named his son Diego Maradona. The household stirs to life each morning when Abel rises at 4 a.m and sets off on a nine mile hike to the nearest high school. He has no watch, so he judges the time from the sun, knowing that it will take three hours to reach school.





After Abel leaves for school, Diego Maradona, who is 11, wakes the three young children, feeds them cold cornmeal much left over from the previous night’s dinner, and walks with them to the elementary school which is few miles away. When Diego and young children return in the afternoon, they gather firewood, fetch water, tend the chickens and sometimes search for edible wild plants. Abel returns over by 7 p.m and cooks more cornmeal mush for dinner. He dispenses orders and affections, nurses the younger ones when they are sick, comforts them when they miss their parents, coaches them with their school work, and rules the household with tenderness and efficiency. His goal is to graduate from high school and become a policeman, because the job will provide a steady salary.


Westerners sometimes think that Africa’s problem is a lack of initiative or hard work. Nobody think that after talking to Abel and Diego or so many other Zimbabwean who display a resilience that left me inspired.”

Zimbabwe’s tragedy isn’t its people, but its leaders. It is telling that Africa’s greatest success story, Botswana is adjacent to one of its greatest failures. The difference is that for decades Botswana had been exceptionally well and honestly managed, and Zimbabwe pillaged.






The Bottom Line:

Friends let me tell you one thing, the total world population is 6,814,200,000 millions and African continent population is just 973 millions. Even if each and every individual give just a grain per day all the Africans can have a sumptuous feast. Is that true? Just imagine how our life would if we are in the same critical position. I know because i already imagined and its for you to imagine that. Come on Friends "Discover the joy in Helping."

Saturday, April 10, 2010

"Hungriest place on Earth"

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Akobo, in the eastern region of Jonglei, is now the "hungriest place on earth," according to aid officials, after a new survey showed that 46% of children under five are malnourished - 15% severely so. The town's crumbling, bullet-scarred hospital is treating some of the most serious cases.

A dozen painfully thin children lay on beds, some in obvious distress as their mothers tried to feed them. The United Nations' senior humanitarian official in South Sudan called the malnutrition figures "astonishing… and extraordinary." The levels of malnutrition were three times higher than the standard UN threshold for an emergency.

"The situation is not good," said Bernadette Tata, a nurse in Akobo hospital. "But we can cope."

She also described a situation:

A few minutes earlier, a gaunt woman called Nadulchan had come into the hospital with her three-year-old son, Dwal.

She sat on a bed, trying to support his lolling head, as he appeared to drift out of consciousness.

"There's nothing to eat," she said quietly. "I lost two children in the fighting with the hunger. I pray I don't lose this one."

Hunger is a familiar enemy across much of this vast, impoverished and insecure region. The World Food Programme estimates that nearly half the population will need food aid at some point this year. The situation in Akobo is simply the most extreme example.

Makeshift shelters:

Save the Children, one of the organizations already working in Akobo, warned of the challenges ahead.

"This is a very testing year," conceded Goi Jooyul Yol, the commissioner of Akobo County, who was sent here in 2009 to tackle the crisis following a series of massacres.

He said he had only received about a tenth of his expected budget from the government, and warned that a continuation of the drought would be "unbearable and unthinkable."

The rule of law was not implemented. Hungry people will get a gun in order to get a cow to eat. It is a matter of survival."

On the dusty outskirts of Akobo, families remain camped in makeshift shelters, waiting for food aid, rain and the opportunity to return to their villages.

Nyadir Muon, 40, said her family had fled their homes a year ago when they were attacked by members of a rival community, who abducted their children and stole cattle.

In theory, these should be hopeful times for South Sudan.

The Bottom Line:

Friends let me tell you one thing, the total world population is 6,814,200,000 millions and African continent population is just 973 millions. Even if each and every individual give just a grain per day all the Africans can have a sumptuous feast. Is that not true?

Thursday, April 8, 2010

A true story of “Stanford University”:

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One day a lady faded in gingham and her husband, dressed in a homespun threadbare suit, walked timidly without an appointment into the “Harvard University” president’s outer office. The secretary could tell in a moment that such country hicks had no business at “Harvard”. She frowned.

“We want to meet the president”, the man said softly. “He will be busy all the day”, the secretary snapped. “We will wait”, the lady replied.

For hours the secretary ignored them, hoping that the couple would finally become discouraged and go away. They didn’t. And the secretary grew frustrated and finally decided to disturb the president. “May be if they just see you for few minutes, they will leave”, she told him and he sighed in exasperation and nodded. Someone of his importance obviously didn’t have the time to spend with them. Stern faced with dignity, the president strutted towards the couple.





The lady told him, “We had a son who attended “Harvard” for one year. He loved Harvard and he was very happy here. But about a year ago, he was accidently killed. And my husband and I would like to erect a memorial to him, somewhere on he campus”. The president wasn’t touched, he was shocked.

“Madam”, he said gruffly, “we can’t put up a statue for everyone who attended Harvard and died. If we did, the place would look like a cemetery”. “Oh. No” the lady explained quickly, “we don’t want to erect a statue. We thought we would like to give a building to Harvard”.

The president rolled his eyes. He glanced at the gingham dress and homespun suit, and then exclaimed, “A building! Do you have any earthly idea how much a building costs? We have over seven and a half million dollars in the physical plant at Harvard”.

For a moment the lady was silent. The president was pleased. He could get rid of them now.
The lady turned to her husband and said quietly, “Is that all it costs to start a University? Why don’t we just start our own”? Her husband nodded. The president’s face wilted in confusion and bewilderment.

Mr and Mrs Leland Stanford walked away, travelling to “Palo Alto”. California, where they established the University that bears their name, a memorial to a son that Harvard no longer cared about!.


The Bottom Line:

Appearances can of course be deceptive, but most the time that is what we go by. “Is that not true?” "I feel it is absolutely true and people often make it. Be careful friends, don't fall in this trap. It is my humble request to you all".

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

Its eBAY's Story Friends:

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eBAY's Story:

“Ebay” started as an online company in September, 1995. It was created by “Mr. Pierre Omidyar”, who was a resident of “San Jose”. At first his site was named as the ‘Auction Web’ and it was intended to be an online marketing store and was one of the first websites of this kind in the world. Ebay was the domain name used by Omidyar for the site. His company was named as the “Echo Bay”, which comes from the domain used for his site. Echo Bay and the Ebay Auction Web was just one part of Echo Bay’s website at ebay.com. The first thing sold by the site was a broken laser point for $14.




The site quickly became massively popular, as sellers came to list all sorts of odd things and buyers actually bought them. Relying on trust seemed to work remarkably well, and meant that the site could almost be left alone to run itself. The site had been designed from the start to collect a small fee on each sale, and it was this money that Omidyar used to pay for Auction Web's expansion. The fees quickly added up to more than his current salary, and so he decided to quit his job and work on the site full-time. It was at this point, in 1996, which headed the feedback facilities, to let buyers and sellers rate each other and make buying and selling safer.



















In 1997, Omidyar changed Auction Web's - and his company's - name to 'eBay', which is what people had been calling the site for a long time. He began to spend a lot of money on advertising, and had the eBay logo designed. It was in this year that the one-millionth item was sold (it was a toy version of Big Bird from Sesame Street).

Then, in 1998 -the peak of the dot com boom - eBay became big business, and the investment in Internet businesses at the time allowed it to bring in senior managers and business strategists, who took in public on the stock market. It started to encourage people to sell more than just collectibles, and quickly became massive site where you could sell anything, large or small. Unlike other sites, though, eBay survived the end of the boom, and is still going strong today.

1999 eBay has spread worldwide, launching sites in the UK, Australia and Germany. EBay bought half.com, an Amazon-like online retailer, in the year 2000 - the same year it introduced Buy it now - and bought PayPal, an online payment service, in 2002.

Pierre Omidyar has now earned an estimated $3 billion from eBay, and still serves as Chairman of the Board. Oddly enough, he keeps a personal web blog at http://pierre.typepad.com. There are now literally millions of items bought and sold every day on eBay, all over the world. For every $100 spent online worldwide, it is estimated that $14 is spent on eBay - that's a lot of laser pointers




The Bottom Line:

I think eBAY has practically proved that “An Idea can change our Life” because it had made Mr. Pierre Omidyar a billionaire. Friends why don’t we get these types of ideas? I have an answer for this – “Because we don’t use our brain to think” am I correct? “I think so, I am extremely sorry if I am wrong.”