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Saturday, 14 June 2014

Keep Smiling! Find a reason to smile




You can have several reasons to fight, several reasons to become sad, several reasons to get annoyed. But the immense pleasure comes when you smile. Always find out a reason to smile in every depressing moment or any moment you feel you are not happy.

See this kid who has every reason to cry or to be sad but still he is smiling and we, who have everything, always find a reason to become sad.
This little boy is mentally challenged, he will not accepted by the society but still he is smiling because he wants to be happy for the time he is alive.
And we who are physically and mentally fit always try to find out a reason we can fight with others, make others sad, make people cry. Because this gives us pleasure and satisfaction.
Just keep yourself in place of this kid and feel his pain. You will realise how cruel we are and how we are not happy instead of having basic needs roti, kapda and makan.
Reason for smile for these kids-
1. I got some foood yeaah
2. Lakshmi, 13, smiles as she details how getting an education has provided her with opportunities she never thought she'd have.
Aging India
Reason we find to be sad or cry or fight- 
1. Fight with husband
2. Political issues
3. Fought with my gf/bf

4. Mommmma i dont want this cake
I learned to live life in a way i can stay happy. Always find a way to make yourself and make others smile.
Keep smiling!

Wednesday, 23 April 2014

Red ink emails are wrong??? | Career | Hangout | Sleep Hungry

Red ink emails are wrong??? | Career | Hangout | Sleep Hungry



Red which is often referred as aggressive color sits at the end of the spectrum. It also had a negative association, with heat, destruction and evil but that's not all in some cultures like China -- Red color is associated with happiness, where as in others it is commonly associated with sacrifice, passion, fire, beauty, battle, communism, socialism, blood and anger.
Since it is the color of the wavelength of light on the spectrum and easily visible, hence all danger signs like stop signs/lights, fire equipment’s, brake lights are painted red.
People like to write using colorful inks for fun or to emphasize particular words. Though the intention is to make sure that those words in particular will get your attention but sometimes using red ink in such emails is risky.
Since red color has negative connotation, so you are leaving the level of emphasis up to the other side. It sounds as if you are an angry person, it might create a bad impression about you. In normal course of the day Red ink makes your email as warning email which is to express that the sender is clearly upset and want you to action on the email on priority. However there is nothing wrong in writing red ink email in casual correspondence because you know the reader and you are just sending an email with a louder voice. This is much different than writing an email in all caps or yelling on someone.
However, it’s always Good to avoid negative connotations unless its really required.

Thursday, 3 April 2014

Ancient Bharat or Hindustan or Modern India - Land of the Indus

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Hindustan - Land Of the Indus, Hindustan is derived from the modern Persian word Hindu

Let’s discuss about Akhand Bharat “Undivided India” and its history. Akhand Bharat's mythical borders that extend from Afghan to Far East Malaysia.  Afghanistan, Burma, Srilanka, Nepal and Bhutan were some of the present countries which were believed to be the part of Undivided India.
Before Persians gave the name HINDU, religion followed by people of Ancient India was "Sanadhana Dharmam". Persians gave the name Hindu.
India is supposed to be the oldest land in which the civilizations were created. Persians who lived at this period were the reasons for the name of the religion Hindu that we use now. They even gave the name Hindustan and India to our country. Sindhu was the river that was flowing in our country. In their pronunciation there is no "s" so they called it as Hind and later the groups of people with similar culture were called as Hindus in our country.
Sindhu was a Sanskrit name given to the river that flowed here and the people beyond the river Sindhu were called Hindu and the place they follow the religion was called as the Hindustan. And moreover the Persians don't have the "S" sound in their script and pronunciation so they named the Sindhu River as Indus. The place that the Hindus lived was called as the Hindustan in Sanskrit. This was the origin of the word Hindustan.
With the increase in the population of India, there were lots of concepts of living together in groups. Then there emerged civilizations in our country where people split themselves and formed into many groups. There came the Indus Valley Civilization.
Hindustan is derived from the Modern Persian word Hindu. In Old Persian, the region beyond the Indus River was referred to as Hinduš (the Iranian equivalent of Sanskrit Sindhu), hence Modern Persian Hind, Hindu. This combined with the Iranian suffix -stān results in Hindustan, "land of the Indus". By about 1st century BCE, the term "Hein-tu" was used by Chinese, for referring to North Indian people. The term came into common use under the rule of the Mughals who referred to their dominion, centered on Delhi, as 'Hindustan'.
India and Bharat are equally official short names for the Republic of India, while "Hindustan" is still widely used as an alternative name when Indians speak amongst themselves.
The Prehistoric Era:-
  • The Stone Age: The Stone Age began 500,000 to 200,000 years ago and recent finds in Tamil Nadu(at C. 75000 years ago, before and after the explosion of the Toba Volcano) indicate the presence of the first anatomically humans in the area. Tools crafted by proto-humans that have been dated back to two million years have been discovered in the Northwestern part of the country.
  • The Bronze Age: The Bronze Age in the Indian subcontinent dates back to around 3300 BCE with the early Indus Valley Civilization. Historically part of ancient India, it is one of the world's earliest, urban civilizations, along with Mesopotamia and Ancient Egypt. Inhabitants of this era developed new techniques in metallurgy and handicraft and produced copper, bronze, lead and tin.
Early Historic Period:-
Vedic Period: 1500-500 BCE.
The Vedic Period is distinguished by the Indo-Aryan culture which was associated with the texts of Vedas, sacred to Hindus, and that were orally composed in Vedic Sanskrit. The Vedas are some of the oldest extant texts, next to those in Egypt and Mesopotamia. The Vedic era in the subcontinent lasted from about 1500-500 BCE, laying down the foundation of Hinduism and other cultural dimensions of early Indian society. The Aryans laid down Vedic civilization all over North India, particularly in the Gangetic Plain.
Mahajanapadas:
This period saw the second major rise in urbanization in India after the Indus valley Civilization. The word "maha" means great and the word "janapada" means foothold of a tribe. In the later Vedic Age a number of small kingdoms or city states had mushroomed across the subcontinent and also find mention in early Buddhist and Jain literature as far back as 1000 BCE. By 500 BCE, sixteen "republics" or Mahajanapadas has been established, namely; Kasi, Kosala, Anga, Magadha, Vajji (or Vriji),Malla, Chedi, Vatsa (or Vamsa), Kuru, Panchala, Matsya, Surasena, Assaka, Avanti,Gandhara, and Kamboja.
  • Persian and Greek Conquests:  Much of the Northwest subcontinent (currently Afghanistan and Pakistan) came under the rule of the Persian Achaemenid Empire in C. 520 BCE under the rule of Darius the Great and remained so for two centuries. In 326 BCE, Alexander the Great conquered Asia Minor and the Achaemenid Empire, when he reached the Northwest frontier of the Indian subcontinent he defeated King Porus and conquered most of Punjab 
  • Maurya Empire: The Mauryan Empire was the first major empire in the  history of India and ruled the land from 322 BC to 185 BC. Important   rulers of this dynasty were Chandragupta Maurya, Bindusara, and King Ashoka. Bindusara was succeeded by his son Ashoka, the most famous  of the Mauryan Kings who reign from- 273 - 232 B.C. He extended the   boundaries of his empire considerably - stretching from Kashmir and Peshawar in the North and Northwest to Mysore in the South and Orissa in the East - but his fame rests not so much on military conquests as on  his celebrated renunciation of war. After witnessing the carnage at the battle field of Kalinga (269 B.C.) in Orissa, Ashoka resolved to dedicate  himself to Dhamma - or righteousness. The war of Kalinga was the turning point in the life of Ashoka to the extent that he shunned all forms  of violence and became a strict vegetarian.
As Ashoka became a devout Buddhist, he began to spread the teachings of Buddha by issuing
edicts. These edicts were sent to different parts of  the empire, where they were engraved on rocks or pillars, for the common people to see and read them. These edicts were written in different scripts. Most of them were in Brahmi, which was common in most parts of the empire. The language was generally Prakrit (ancient language), as it was spoken by the common people, whereas Sanskrit was spoken by educated upper caste people.
The great Mauryan Empire did not last long after the death of Ashoka and ended in 185 BC. Weak kings on one hand and the unmanageability of a vast empire on the other caused the rapid decline of the Mauryas
  • The Golden age: After Mauryan decline lot many smaller kingdoms  came into picture. Massive Mauryan kingdom was broken into smaller kingdom.Many other Empires ruled India like Satavahana Empire (50 B.C to 250 A.D), Kushan Empire (ca. 2nd century b.c.-3rd century a.d.), Gupta Dynasty (320 to 600 CE). 
  • The Classic age:
- Hrasha's or Harshwardhan's Empire (590-647 AD)
- The Chalukyas, Pallavas, and Pandyas (550 AD to 1310 AD).
- Chola Empire , Pratiharas - Palas - Rashtrakutas, The  Rajputs, Vijayanagar Empire
- Islamic Sultanates from Persia and Turkey.
- Delhi Sultanate (1211 - 1525 AD).
The Mughal Empire: In 1526, Babur, a descendant of Timur and Gengis Kahn from Fergana Valler (present day Uzbekistan) swept across the Khyber Pass and established the Mughal Empire which covered modern day Afghanistan, Pakistan, India and Bangladesh. The Mughal dynasty ruled most of the Indian subcontinent till 1600; after which it went into decline after 1707 and was finally defeated during India's first war of Independence in 1857.
Colonial Era: From the 16th century, European powers such as Portugal, Netherlands, France and the United Kingdom established trading posts in India. Later, they took advantage of internal conflicts and established colonies in the country.
The British Rule: The British Rule in India began with the coming of the British East India Company in 1600 and continued till Indian independence from British rule in 1947.
Fight For Independence:
In the 20th century Mahatma Gandh or Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi led millions of people in a national campaign of non-violent civil disobedience to contain independence from the British.
Independence and Partition of Hindustan:
Religious tension between the Hindus and Muslims had been brewing over the years, especially in provinces like Punjab and West Bengal. The Muslims were a minority and they did not feel secure in the prospect of an exclusively Hindu government and hence made them wary of independence. All through this Mahatama Gandhi called for unity among the two religious groups. The British, whose economy had been weakened after World War 2, decided to leave India and participated in the formation of an interim government. The British Indian territories gained independence in 1947, after being partitioned into the Union of India and the Dominion of Pakistan.
Great Empires Of Ancient Hindustan/Bharat/India who ruled for many centuries-
By 600 B.C., sixteen such territorial powers, including the Magadha, Kosala, Kuru, and Gandhara, stretched across the North India plains from modern-day Afghanistan to Bangladesh.
Maurya Empire
British India
Pala Empire
Mughal Empire
Kushan Empire
Chola Empire
Gupta Empire
Republic of India
Tughlaq Sultanate
Maratha Empire
Khilji Sultanate
Indo-Greek Kingdom
Satavahana dynasty
Let’s discuss about the present India in our next blog…”The modern India”..
posted by Ruchira Gupta
on 03-04-2014

Monday, 31 March 2014

Paneer Butter Masala

Paneer Butter Masala is one of the most popular dish in Indian North Indian Cuisine. Very commonly ordered in restraunts in India. This is rich in ingredients and its tastes delicious. 
Most of the North Indians are fond of Paneer Butter Masala. This recipie will help you tp prepare PNB very easily and quickly without putting extra efforts. Withing Minutes you will have a delicious and rich PNB ready to be served.
Ingrediants- 
  • 200 or 250 gms paneer/cottage cheese, cubed or diced
  • 2 tbsp cashew – soaked if you have time and then ground with some water to a smooth paste. if less time, then just grind the cashews to a smooth paste.
  • 4-5 medium size tomatoes – pureed
  • 1 or 2 green chili, slit (reserve a few for garnishing)
  • 1 inch ginger and 3-4 garlic – crushed or ground in a mortar & pestle
  • 1 inch ginger – julienned (reserve a few for garnishing)
  • 1 bay leaf/tej patta
  • 1 tsp kasuri methi/dry methi leaves
  • 1 tsp garam masala or tandoori masala
  • ½ tsp red chili powder/lal mirch powder or deghi mirch or kashmiri mirch powder
  • 1 tbsp oil + 1 or 2 tbsp butter
  • 1.5 cups water
  • a few coriander/cilantro/dhania leaves for garnishing (optional)
  • salt and sugar as required – check notes below for adding sugar
 
Instructions
 
  1. heat oil and butter in a pan. add bay leaf and fry for some 10-15 seconds or till the oil become fragrant.
  2. add ginger-garlic paste and fry till the raw aroma disappears.
  3. add the tomato puree and stir well. add red chili powder after 2-3 mins and stir again. saute till the oil starts to leave the sides of the tomato paste.
  4. add cashew paste and stir well. saute the cashew paste till the oil begins to leave the sides of the masala paste.
  5. add water and stir. simmer on a low flame.
  6. add julienned ginger and green chilies, salt and sugar and simmer till the curry begins to thicken.
  7. add the paneer cubes and cook them for 2-3 minutes till they become soft.
  8. don’t cook for a long time as the paneer will become dense.
  9. lastly add crushed kasuri methi/dry fenugreek leaves & garam masala. stir.
  10. garnish paneer butter masala with coriander leaves. 
Serving-
Serve with corriender leaves and some green chilli with rotis , Naan or basmati rice. Have some onion and lemon with side compliments.
Enjoy your delicious Paneer Butter Masala 'PNB'
posted by Animesh Dubey
on 30-03-2014

Tuesday, 25 March 2014

SP - Private company or Political party???






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“The Socialist” Mulayam singh Yadav respectfully known as "Netaji" was recently compared with Italian dictator Mussolini by Beni Prasad Verma. 

A diminutive but a "never say die fighter" draws strong support dominantly from the Yadav clan and Muslims. 
Loyalty means a lot to him, be it a case of Personal Security Officer Shiv Kumar, personal secretary Jagjivan or telephone operator-cum-attendant Tara Chand whom he has retained for the last three decades. 
He is even recognized to go to any extent for his family too --  Daughter-in-law Dimple won Kannauj by-elections only when SP Supremo himself has vowed to get her elected unopposed. 
But in last few years’ his lifestyle changed midway. Person, who used to sip butter milk bottled in a thermos flask during flights, now prefers ginger drinks – Samajwadi Party supremo is now refreshing his party as a “Private limited company” for his own family members.
Mualyam Singh Yadav (CM, MP, Minister) 
Akhilesh Yadav (Son, MLA, MP, CM) 
Dimple Yadav (Akhilesh's Wife, MP) 
Dharmendra Yadav (Nephew, MP) 
Shivpal Singh Yadav (Cousin, MLA, Minister) 
Ram Gopal Yadav (Cousin, MP) 
Upcoming …
Akshay Yadav son of Ram gopal Yadav,
Prateek Yadav cousin brother of Mr. Akhilesh Yadav 
Mulayam singh Yadav who started his political career by inspirations of veteran socialist; Ram Manohar Lohia who always fought against dynasty rule, is now changing his boats. 
Now rather than contributing to the society it seems contribution towards family is on priority.
But it seems Days for this government are numbered. Party workers are fed up with Family politics -- nearly 100 party members left the party on Sunday. 
SP is running a private company, there is no space for the genuine and common workers. Mulayam Singh is distributing lucrative posts and seats to family members and 'loved ones' -- says Trilok Tyagi who had joined the party in 2007 along with 2 other members of RLD. 
Party is facing resentment over ticket distribution for 2014 lok sabha elections. Some of the leaders who were associated over a decade, moved out of SP. 
Time has knocked the door; current government is already sitting on the records of Poor governance in Muzaffarnagar and with strong leaders like Ramakant Yadav, who won the azamgrah seat for SP both the times, will now be posing a strong challenge to the SP supremo. 
With other senior party leaders unhappy with ticket distribution and many leaving the party ---2014 elections would be a tough situation not only for the Samajwadi party but for SP Supremo family limited company.
What’s your view on this??
posted by Anit Chauhan
on 25-03-2014

Sunday, 23 March 2014

All About Music- Classical/Art Music

HISTORY
The term classical music refers to a number of different, but related, genres. Without any qualification, the usual meaning of “classical music” in the English language is European classical music (an older usage describes specifically the Western art music of the Classical Music Era). It can also refer to the classical (or art) music of non-Western cultures such as Indian classical music or Chinese classical music.
The major time divisions of classical music are
The early music period, which includes
  • Medieval(476-1400)
  • Renaissance (1400-1600)
Common practice period
  • Boroque(1600- 1750)
  • Classical(1730-1820)
  • Romantic(1815-1950)
Modern and Contemporary Period
  • 20th century Classical(1900-2000)
  • Contemporary Classical(1975-current)
The dates are generations, since the periods overlapped and the categories are somewhat arbitrary.
In a Western context, classical music is generally a classification covering music composed and performed by professionally trained artists. Classical music is a written tradition. It is composed and written using music notation, and as a rule is performed faithfully to the score. Art music is a term widely used to describe classical music and other serious forms of artistic musical expression, Western or non-Western, especially referring to serious music composed after 1950.
Performance of classical music repertoire often demands a significant level of technical mastery on the part of the musician; proficiency in sight-reading and ensemble playing, thorough understanding of tonal and harmonic principles.
Some of very few 21st century classical music artists:
Anthony Gilbert (1934)
Jerry herman (1933)
Ray Reach(1948)
posted by Ashwarya Joshi
on 15-03-2014

Open Letter to Kalmadi requesting him to contest from Pune



Dear Mr. Suresh Kalmadi,
Namaskar!!
Welcome back to Pune. I know you have been busy out of your constituency for most time, but we can understand your commitments with the Tihar Jail.
Now, that you are back in the city and spending some leisure time thinking to decide whether or not you should contest the Lok Sabha elections or not,  I would want to give a piece of ‘unwanted’ advice.  Now that Congress has not given any ‘bhav’ to you and have fielded Vishwajeet Kadam from Pune instead, we are to believe that you are left with limited options – either you support Kadam or contest elections yourself or boycott election completely and live a retired life probably as a governor of Telangana or any other state. (Sheila Dixit told us being a Governor is the best retirement job these days).
My sincere advice to you would be to totally ignore first option as it would be totally unfair to Kadam who may be losing anyways, to get a perfect excuse – “I lost because of affiliation with Kalmadi.” I would also advice to dismiss the third option because I believe people should not lose the respect for the First person of the state (Governor). So, that leaves the second option – contest as an independent. I would highly recommend you to do so.
My reasons are very simple. Every time I discuss politics at the tapri with my fellow colleagues of IT company, who are from different parts of India, my head goes in shame to mention my MP is a tainted politician who has been sacked from IOA on charges of corruption. When my international clients boast about China and London Olympics, I feel embarrassed that my MP could not even ensure a clean CommonWealth Games in 2010. So much so that misuse of office party funds is jokingly called ‘Kalmadisation’ nowadays. Even during the Anna movement, when people were confronting their MPs  across India to press for Lokpal, we could not even do that because you were busy sipping tea in the Tihar jail. Therefore, I now believe that in the city of Tilak and Gokhale, we cannot afford to have a Kalmadi.
And so, it would be in the earnest interest of the reputation of Punekars that you contest elections and we get a chance to repent what we did the last three times. If you feel that it is just your name that has been tainted, its not correct. Collectively it is a taint on us who sent you to parliament in the first place. So, ideally it should be us who should disown you through the medium of these elections. I wish that you contest and we thoroughly reject you. I wish you lose so badly that it be a lesson to future leaders of consequences of corruption. I wish you lose deposit in the same way our nation lost deposit of honor while hosting the games. I wish that we succeed in washing our sins of sending a tainted politician to the parliament by defeating you. I wish we regain our Pune pride by completely marginalizing and disowning you.
And I wish when you come to us this time asking for votes, we ask “Who are you?” in the same way as you claimed you suffer from dementia (memory loss) in the Commonwealth Games scam investigation.
Regards,
A common punekar
posted by Anand Walunjkar
on 22-03-2014