Showing posts with label India. Show all posts
Showing posts with label India. Show all posts

Thursday, August 11, 2016

Top 5 Quotes of Mahendra Singh Dhoni

1.  I have three dogs at home. Even after losing a series or winning a series, they treat me the same way. 
2.  For me, opposition is just another opposition. 
3.  I never allow myself to be pressured. 
4.  You die, you die. You don't see which is the better way to die
5.  It's like having 100kg put over you. After that even if you put a mountain, it will not make a difference.









Tuesday, March 3, 2015

Some Facts about Continental Drift


  • Earth's crust is not a single continuous layer{yeah really}
  • It is made up of a number of gigantic pieces like a huge jigsaw puzzle{really huge}
  • Each piece is called a crustal plate{geographic students know very well}
  • Currents of molten rock rise up through the mantle like boiling water in saucepan{don't worry if you didn't understand ,you may not have to give test on it}
  • These form convection cells that drive the movement of the plates so they move continuously moving away or towards each other.{this is continental drift}
     

Monday, March 2, 2015

Maruti Suzuki Ciaz

A best in class car with every saftey measures and a stunning look with spacious room. A best every car from Maruti Suzuki.

Ciaz is equipped with highly advanced features like Camera Assisted Reverse Parking, Keyless Push Start System and Smart Key. Along with that, intelligently designed features like Rear AC Vents, Personal Reading Lamps andRear Sunshade ensure complete comfort for the passengers.

Sunday, March 1, 2015

Narendra Modi

Narendra Modi,
A impressed man for INDIANS. Who we belive in him as he will make our Country get a good progress. He became noticed by his work in Gujrath. He got a good impression on the minds of Indians. His guru or his teacher LK.Advani was helpful to him.
A chaiwala of Gujrath whom has became the PM of India .He did not get good education as the background of his family was back but now he has connection with the world not with the gully boys or his naughty friends.Think for yourself a chai wala who did not get proper education  has become the PM of India...So make commitment now as what you have to become now you will surely succed in your life as Narendra Damodar Das Modiji has. We can identify how talented the man is.
His role model is Sardar Vallabhai Patel.
Kurtha of Modiji has a good story, When Narendra Modi was at his teenage or little more age, At the summer wearing full hand dresses was difficult and he only has the full hand dress and no much clothes were withn him, so he teared the full hand of the clothes and made it as sleeve, Thus he liked the shirt and then he wore always the same.
So now his kurth is of half sleeves. Narendra modi not only wore Kurtha or any other formal dress, he also wore Jeans pant, western style dress.
Her the minister of Information and Broad casting says that "He gives us so much freedom and has only one mantra for us -- 'You should have the courage to take decisions. Listen to all, but take decisions which are best for the country,"  We need such person who thinks only for the progress of the country.
So here there was some of the description about the Indias PM Narendra Modi.
Thanks for reading,
Modi with his Guru
Modi western style

Modi western style

Friday, February 27, 2015

Lenskart

Lenskart is a indian company, in this eyewere site we  buy eyeglasses, sunglasses and contact lenses .
  
Here the products are very good and there are different types of products.

We purchased more than 20 products in lenskart it is good and there is no problems we got . And the service of leskart is also good .
Then there are may offers like daily offers weekly offers etc in lenskart the items and cheep and best quality.

So the suggesion we are giving that lenskart is best choice for eyeglasses
,contact lenses,and sunglasses.(eyeweres).

Friday, January 2, 2015

Redmi Note 4G now available from Airtel stores

Mi India fans can now book a confirmed appointment to purchase the Redmi Note 4G from any of 133 Airtel stores across 6 cities in India.
 As reported by The Mobile Indian earlier, Airtel has started

Wednesday, December 24, 2014

Airtel to start selling Xiaomi Redmi Note 4G from 1st week of Jan

Xiaomi, which operates in India under the brand name Mi, has announced the launch of its Redmi Note in India a few week back for Rs 9,999.

Friday, November 15, 2013

Indian scientific history

aryabhatta
Aryabhatta I earth’s rotational time
At the age of 23, Aryabhatta I judiciously noted down his observations and calculations for a mathematical system to figure out the workings of the universe for his now famous work Aryabhatiyam. The book, his only surviving treatise on mathematical astronomy, states that the Earth was spherical in shape, rotates on its axis and like the remaining planets, revolves around the Sun in an elliptical orbit. All this, 1500 years and 1000 years before Copernicus and Galileo! He also calculated that the Earth takes 23 hours 56 minutes and 4.01 seconds to complete one rotation, which coincides with the modern value of 23:56:4.091.
Brahmagupt a rules for zero
While Bhaskara I maybe credited with giving zero the symbol it has today and Aryabhatta for introducing zero to the world, it was in fact Brahmagupta who gave zero its exalted status as a number in mathematics. He was the first mathematician to frame the rules of operations. He concluded rather successfully in his book, Brahmasphuta Siddhanta that the addition or subtraction of zero to or from any quantity, negative or positive is always zero, the product of any quantity with zero is zero and that the division of any quantity by zero is infinity.
Bhaskara IFormulated units, tens, hundreds…
He did give the numeral zero its symbol, but Bhaskara’s I probably most important mathematical contribution concerns the representation of numbers in the positional system. Numbers are arranged in columns and have to be read from right to left as units, tens, hundreds, thousands and so on. He has given us an extremely succinct method for writing down even very large numbers.
 Nagarjuna I
Discoverer of alloys
Around 2nd BC, in a laboratory in Nagarjuna Konda, Andhra Pradesh, Nagarjuna I, a Buddhist monk, exclaimed in joy as he discovered the process of alloying. His book, Rasarathnakara, retains notes on the process of extraction of silver, tin and copper from their ores and their purification. They also mention the process of distillation, sublimation, 106 calcination and colouring of metals.
Baudhayana Before Pythagoras
Baudhayana, in his book, the Sulba Sutra, mentions a theorem stating that a rope stretched along the length of the diagonal (hypotenuse) of a rectangle produces an area, which the vertical and horizontal sides make together. Sounds familiar? It is in fact a prelude to a theorem, which would eventually be known as the Pythagoras theorem.
varahamihira
Varahamihira
Mapping the skies Gather around all ye sailors, astronomers, astrologers and star-gazers. A man named Varahamihira gazed at the stars one night as you do and observed that the night sky continuously shifts throughout the year as the Earth orbits the sun. But, “If one were to take a fixed point in time and mark the position of the star on that day every year,” he put forth, “one would notice the sky slowly shifting backwards with each progressing year.” He was the first to mention in his work Pancha Siddhantika that the ayanamsa, or the shifting of the equinox is 50.32 seconds, which remains unchanged till this day. This time period helps us chart and navigate the skies at night or day, learn about our horoscope for the year and keep a track of our favourite constellation.
Bhaskara II
GRAVITY
We don’t know whether an apple fell on Bhaskara II’s head as he was resting underneath the tree or that maybe he fell from the apple tree itself. All we know is that he was the first to conceive and write on the notion of gravity and the effect of its force some 500 years before the proverbial apple fell on Sir Isaac Newton’s head. In his book, Surya Siddhant, Bhaskara II makes a note on the force of gravity: “Objects,” he noted, “fall on earth due to a force of attraction by the Earth. Therefore, the Earth, planets, constellations, moon, and sun are held in orbit due to this attraction.” How do you like them apples?
shushrutha
Sushruta
1st PLASTIC SURGEON
2600 years ago, Sushruta along with his colleagues conducted what could be termed as the first plastic surgery in the world. To reconstruct the amputated noses of his patients, a marked punishment of their crimes, Sushruta would use his technique of forehead flap rhinoplasty, which is repairing the disfigured nose with a flap of skin from the forehead, a practice almost unchanged to this day. Educated in Varanasi, Sushruta pioneered the science of surgery in India. His book, the Sushruta Samhita, is the first classical book of surgery, in which he describes over 120 surgical instruments, 300 surgical procedures and classifies human surgery in eight categories. In case you are wondering about the pain, local anaesthesia was given in the form of medicated wine.
kanada
Kanada
Proponent of Atomic Theory
According to folklore, whilst nibbling on a morsel of food, Kanada threw away the bits after realising that they could not be divided into smaller bites. This incident prompted him to consider that everything in the universe is made up of pramanu (atom), the real entities which are obtained when a matter is divided and subdivided until further division is not possible. Many believe that Kanada was the earliest proponent of the atomic concept in the universe and that the atom was the indestructible particle of matter, long before John Dalton some 2500 years later introduced his Law of Atomic Theory into modern day physics.

Life barier on the western ghats of india

Birds

There are 508 species of birds found in the Western Ghats, out of which 16 species are endemic to the region. The Laughingthrush are amongst the most prolific ones sighted here. The two main species of the Laughingthrush found in the region are the Kerala Laughingthrush and the Black-chinned Laughingthrush; the former found principally in the region south of the Palakkad Gap whereas the population of the latter is confined to the Nilgiri region in the Ghats. Dr P O Nameer of the Centre for Wildlife Studies, Kerala, adds that species differ morphologically and are allopatric in their distribution, meaning that their ranges do not overlap each other ensuring that each species have their distinctive characteristics preserved. “While the two species may share their home in the high altitude regions of the southern Western Ghats, their behavioural activities are different,” he says. The bird calls of the Kerala Laughingthrush consists of high-pitched series of steeply ascending notes ‘pee-koko… pee-koko’ while the Black-chinned resort to making birds calls in ascending and descending sounds of ‘kek’, heard during early morning and afternoon periods. Another distinction between the species is their diet preferences. With the species in the Nilgiri region feast on flowers, fruits and insects, their counterparts in the south of the Palakkad Gap remain steadfastly vegetarian by feasting on fruits and flowers. Within the regions of the Palakkad Gap, home to the Kerala Laughingthrush, there are two distinct zones. Here the sub-species of the Kerala Laughingthrush – the Palani Laughingthrush is found to the south – and the Banasura Laughingthrush is found in Coorg and Wayanad region, which lies to the north of the Gap.

Fish

Almost all the rivers in the southern part of India have their origins in the Western Ghats. A total number of 102 species of fishes reside in these rivers and hill streams of the Ghats, of which 11 species belonging to the Garra genus are endemic in various isolated areas of the southern Western Ghats. As majority of the rivers of the Western Ghats empty out into the sea, these fresh water fish have developed a peculiar characteristic to help adapt to the conditions. “The fishes of this genus have a disc protruding on the ventral side near its mouth. It is known as a sucker and is used by the species to attach their bodies physically to either the roots of the trees, small tennis sized pebbles or boulders and rocks near the river banks,” elaborates Dr M Arunachalam, professor at the Sri Paramakalyani Centre for Environmental Sciences, Tamil Nadu. This, he states, “allows the fish to avoid getting washed out into the sea while maintaining their velocity in the rapid river current.” The Garra gotyla stenorhynchus belonging to this genus is found, thanks to its limited distribution pattern, only in the tributaries of the Kaveri basin. Another species called the Tunga Garra (Garra bicornuta), found only in the Tunga River in Karnataka, has two distinct horn like structures on the dorsal side of its head, near its mouth, which are made of keratin and in some cases are often used as a defence mechanism by them,” says Arunachalam. The Kalakad Garra (Garra kalakadensis), found in the Pachayar River in Kalakad Mundanthurai Tiger Reserve region is characterised and identified by its physical appearance. “In order to survive in the cold waters of the Western Ghats, the Kalakad Garra, has undergone an evolutionary adaption, thereby ridding its body of scales and having a naked ventral side.”

Elephants

The elephant population is focused mainly in the Nilgiri, Anamalai Hills and the Periyar regions in southern Western Ghats. There are a number of elephant corridors in the Ghats including the Nilgiri-Mysore-Wyanad Elephant Reserves that are spread over Tamil Nadu, Karnataka and Kerala. Another critical corridor lies in the Tirunelli region of Kerala that links the elephant population of Wyanad and Nagarahole with the Brahmagiri hills. A third critical corridor is in the Kollegal region, near the settlement of Bailur in Karnataka. Recent studies have discovered a genetic differentiation in the elephants found in north and south of the Palakkad Gap based on analysis of their mitochondrial DNA. “The elephant population found in the Nilgiri region, which is spread over 15,000 sq km, north of the Gap, can be traced to a single matriarchal lineage,” says Prof Raman Sukumar, an ecologist from the Centre of Ecological Studies at the Indian Institute of Sciences, Tamil Nadu. On the other hand, research further showed the Nilgiri population of elephants to be genetically distinct from those found in the Anamalai Hills and Periyar regions, separated by the 40 km Palakkad Gap. “Here, three mitochondrial haplotypes (which in genetics is a combination of alleles (DNA sequences) at adjacent locations (loci) on the chromosome that are transmitted together) have been discovered among the elephants living in the south of the Gap. Though these differences among these haplotypes maybe small, as they all belong to the Beta elephant clade common in southern and east-central India,” he concludes. While the reason behind this genetic disparity is still elusive, it is indicative of the Gap acting as a biogeographic barrier in the past.