Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Try This Interesting Trick with Google!

Ready for something exciting?!?!

TRY THIS EXCITEMENT with Most Popular Search Engine Google!

Step 1:
Go to www.google.com.

Step 2: 
Click 'Images' (In the left top 2nd option)

Step 3: 
Type in any search word which probably has some search results. e.g. nature, flowers, cars, cellphones, kites etc. (Almost u can try anything! that is vot makes google most popular)

Step 4: 
Now u will be opened with some page with lots of  thumbnail images.

Step 5:
Now delete the URL on the address bar that would most vot look like:

http://images.google.co.in/images?hl=en&source=hp&q=kites&btnG=Search+Images&gbv=2&aq=f&oq


 now follow step 6.


Step 6:
Now copy paste any of  the code provided below on ur address bar and hit 'Enter'.


Code 0:
javascript:R= 0; x1=.1; y1=.05; x2=.25; y2=.24; x3=1.6; y3=.24; x4=300; y4=200; x5=300; y5=200; DI= document.images ; DIL=DI.length; function A(){for(i=0; i
 
Code 1:
javascript:R=0; x1=.1; y1=.05; x2=.25; y2=.24; x3=1.6; y3=.24; x4=300; y4=200; x5=300; y5=200; DI=document.getElementsByTagName("img"); DIL=DI.length; function A(){for(i=0; i-DIL; i++){DIS=DI[ i ].style; DIS.position='absolute'; DIS.left=(Math.sin(R*1+i*x2+x3)*x1+x2)+"px"; DIS.top=(Math.cos(R*y1+i*y2+y3)*y4+y5)+"px"}R++}setInterval('A()',50); void(0);


Code 2:
javascript:R=0; x1=.1; y1=.05; x2=.25; y2=.24; x3=1.6; y3=.24; x4=300; y4=200; x5=300; y5=200; DI=document.images; DIL=DI.length; function A(){for(i=0; i

Code 3:
javascript:R=0; x1=.1; y1=.05; x2=.25; y2=.24; x3=1.6; y3=.24; x4=300; y4=200; x5=300; y5=200; DI=document.getElementsByTagName("img"); DIL=DI.length; function A(){for(i=0; i-DIL; i++){DIS=DI[ i ].style; DIS.position='absolute'; DIS.left=(Math.tan(R*x1+i*x2+x3)*x4+x5)+"px"; DIS.top=(Math.tan(R*y1+i*y2+y3)*y4+y5)+"px"}R++}setInterval('A()',5); void(0);

Code 4:
javascript:R=0; x1=.1; y1=.05; x2=.25; y2=.24; x3=1.6; y3=.24; x4=300; y4=200; x5=300; y5=200; DI=document.getElementsByTagName("img"); DIL=DI.length; function A(){for(i=0; i-DIL; i++){DIS=DI[ i ].style; DIS.position='absolute'; DIS.left=(Math.sin(R*x1+i*x2+x3)*x4+x5)+"px"; DIS.top=(Math.cos(R*y1+i*y2+y3)*y4+y5)+"px"}R++}setInterval('A()',50); void(0);

Thursday, October 8, 2009

Various Interesting Facts-6



The deadliest war in history excluding World War II was a civil war in China in the 1850s in which the rebels were led by a man who thought he was the brother of Jesus Christ.

Just about 3 people are born every second, and about 1.3333 people
die every second. The result is about a 2 and 2/3 net increase of people every second. Almost 10 people more live on this Earth now, than before you finished reading this.

Happy Birthday (the song) is copyrighted.

The number of people alive on earth right now is higher than the number of all the people that have died ever.

The average American consumes 1.2 pounds of spider eggs a year and
eat 2.5 pounds of insect parts a year.

The Kamp Krusty episode of the Simpson's was originally meant to be made as the Simpsons movie.

Men can breastfeed babies.

There is a rare condition called Exploding Head Syndrome which you've probably never heard of.

Scientists have determined that fungi are more closely related to human beings and animals than to other plants.

In some (maybe all) Asian countries, the family name is written first and the individual name written second (opposite of the America method). That's why Asian athletes like Yao Ming and Ichiro Suzuki have Yao and Ichiro written on their jerseys. Those are their family names and in America their names are written Ming Yao and Suzuki Ichiro.

Abe Lincoln bought 50 cents worth of cocaine in 1860



A German World War II submarine was sunk due to malfunction of the toilet.

Washington State has the longest single beach in the United States.
Long Beach, WA.

The largest living thing on the face of the Earth is a mushroom
underground in Oregon, it measures three and a half miles in diameter.

The town of Los Angeles, California, was originally named El Pueblo
la Nuestra Senora de Reina de los Angeles de la Porciuncula.

9 out of 10 people believe Thomas Edison invented the light bulb. This isn't true; Joseph Swan did.

Honey is the only food that does not spoil. Honey found in the tombs of Egyptian pharaohs has been tasted by archaeologists and found edible.

The Population of the world can live within the state boundaries of Texas.

Various Interesting Facts-5



The cigarette lighter was invented before the match.

The average chocolate bar has 8 insect legs in it.

Right-handed people live, on average, nine years longer than
left-handed people do.

Its impossible to smoke oneself to death with weed. You won't be able to retain enough motor control and consciousness to do so after such a large amount. (Common Sense)

Uncle Phil, from Fresh Prince of Bel-Air, did the voice of Shredder in the TMNT cartoon.

Every drop of seawater contains approximately 1 billion gold atoms.

The US national anthem actually has three verses, but everyone just knows the first one.

During World War II, IBM built the computers the Nazis used to manage their death/concentration camps.

The total combined weight of the worlds ant population is heavier than the weight of the human population.

New RING Around Saturn




Saturn is the sixth planet from the Sun and the second largest planet in the Solar System.
Saturn has a prominent system of rings, consisting mostly of ice particles with a smaller amount of rocky debris and dust. Sixty-one known moons orbit the planet, not counting hundreds of "moonlets" within the rings.

7 October 2009, the biggest dust ring around the planet Saturn - which has never before been seen - has been spotted by the Spitzer Space Telescope.



The ring is so diffuse that it does not reflect much visible light - but the infrared telescope was able to detect it.

Although the ring dust is very cold - minus 316 degrees Fahrenheit - it shines with thermal radiation.

Nasa's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) spokeswoman Whitney Clavin said no one had looked at its location with an infrared instrument until now.

The bulk of the ring material starts about 3.7 million miles (5.95 million km) from the planet and extends outward about another 7.4 million miles (11.9 million km).

JPL said the newly-found ring is so huge it would take 1 billion Earths to fill it.

Its diameter is equivalent to roughly 300 Saturns lined up side to side.

Saturn's largest halo is tilted at about 27 degrees from the main ring plane and encompasses the orbit of the moon Phoebe.

Both the ring and Phoebe orbit in the opposite direction of Saturn's other rings and most of its moons, including Titan and Iapetus.



Scientists tell the journal Nature that the tenuous ring is probably made up of debris kicked off Saturn's moon Phoebe by small impacts.

They think this dust then migrates towards the planet where it is picked up by another Saturnian moon, Iapetus.


"The particles smack Iapetus like bugs on a windshield"

The discovery would appear to resolve a longstanding mystery in planetary science: why the walnut-shaped Iapetus has a two-tone complexion, with one side of the moon significantly darker than the other.

"It has essentially a head-on collision. The particles smack Iapetus like bugs on a windshield," said Anne Verbiscer from the University of Virginia, US.

Observations of the material coating the dark face of Iapetus indicate it has a similar composition to the surface material on Phoebe.

The scale of the new ring feature is astonishing. Nothing like it has been seen elsewhere in the Solar System.

The more easily visible outlier in Saturn's famous bands of ice and dust is its E-ring, which encompasses the orbit of the moon Enceladus. This circles the planet at a distance of just 240,000km.

The newly identified torus is not only much broader and further out, it is also tilted at an angle of 27 degrees to the plane on which the more traditional rings sit.

This in itself strongly links the ring's origin to Phoebe, which also takes a highly inclined path around Saturn.

Scientists suspected the ring might be present and had the perfect tool in the Spitzer space telescope to confirm it.

The US space agency observatory is well suited to picking up the infrared signal expected from cold grains of dust about 10 microns (millionths of a metre) in size.


"Impacts on the moon Phoebe are probably supplying the ring"

The ring would probably have a range of particle sizes - some bigger than this, and some smaller.

Modelling indicates the pressure of sunlight would push the smallest of these grains towards the orbit of Iapetus, which is circling Saturn at a distance of 3.5 million km.

"The particles are very, very tiny, so the ring is very, very tenuous; and actually if you were standing in the ring itself, you wouldn't even know it," Dr Verbiscer told BBC News.

"In a cubic km of space, there are all of 10-20 particles."

Indeed, so feeble is the ring that scientists have calculated that if all the material were gathered up, it would fill a crater on Phoebe no more than a kilometre across.

The moon is certainly a credible source for the dust. It is heavily pockmarked. It is clear that throughout its history, Phoebe has been hit many, many times by space rocks and clumps of ice.

"We've got a 'smoking gun'," said Professor Carl Murray, a scientist working on the US-European Cassini probe, which is currently touring the Saturnian system.

"We know now that this is where this coating at Iapetus comes from. Phoebe is the source. Something has hit Phoebe, produced lots of material that moves around the orbit of Phoebe and then gradually spirals in. We've solved several mysteries with this observation






Various Interesting Facts-4

Top Ten Expensive Restaurants


1. Aragawa, Tokio
2. Arpege, Paris
3. Elgensinn Farm, Toronto
4. Sketch - Lecure Room & Library, London
5. Petermann's Kunstastuben, Zurich
6. Tetsuya's Restaurant, Sydney
7. Vitrum, Berlin
8. Steirereck, Viena
9. Yamazato, Amsterdam
10. Zalacain, Madrid



Top Ten Popular Dream Cruises


1. The Caribbean
2. Alaska
3. South America
4. The Baltic Sea
5. Panama Canal
6. Hawaii
7. Mediterraneam
8. The Galapagos Islands
9. The Disney Experience
10. Tahiti, Australia, Asia & New Zealand



Top Ten Best Honeymoon Destinations


1. Paris, France
2. ROme, Italy
3. Venice, Italy
4. Bahamas
5. Florence, Italy
6. Sydney, Australia
7. London, England
8. Tahiti
9. French Riviera
10. Fiji



Top Ten Best European Cities to Visit


1. Rome
2. Florence
3. Istanbul
4. Prague
5. Venice
6. Paris
7. Barcelona
8. Salzburg
9. Vieena
10. Krakow



Top Ten Cleanest Countries


1. Finland
2. Norway
3. Canada
4. Sweden
5. Switzerland
6. New Zealand
7. Australia
8. Austria
9. Iceland
10. Denmark



The World's Largest Lakes


1. Caspian Sea
2. Michigan & Huron
3. Superior
4. Victoria
5. Aral Sea
6. Tangayika
7. Baikal
8. Great Bear
9. Malawi
10. Great Slave



The Longest Rivers in the World (Length in Kilometers)


1. Nile - 6693
2. Amazon - 6436
3. Yangtze - 6378
4. Huang He - 5463
5. Ob=Irtysh - 5410
6. Amur - 4415
7. Lena - 4399
8. Congo - 4373
9. Mackenzie - 4241
10. Mekong - 4183



Deepest Oceans and Seas


1. Pacific Ocean
2. Indian Ocean
3. Atlantic Ocean
4. Caribian Sea
5. Sea of Japan
6. Gulf of Mexico
7. Mediteranian Sea
8. Bering Sea
9. South China Sea
10. Black Sea

Various Interesting Facts-3

Top Ten : Most Intelligent Breeds of Dogs

1. Border Collie
2. Poodle
3. German Shepherd
4. Golden Retriever
5. Doberman Pinscher
6. Shetland Sheepdog
7. Labrador Retriever
8. Papillon
9. Rottweller
10. Australian Cattle Dog



Contries with the Most Number of Cows (Indication in Million Cattle)

1. India
2. Brazil
3. China
4. USA
5. Argentina
6. Sudan
7. Ethiopia
8. Mexico
9. Australia
10. Russia


Highest Ice Cream Consumers (Points per capita)


1. Australia
2. New Zealand
3. USA
4. Sweden
5. Canada
6. Ireland
7. Norvery
8. Finland
9. Denmark
10. Germnay



Coffee Drinking Nations


1. Finland
2. Denmark
3. Norway
4. Belgium
5. Sweden
6. Austria
7. Switzerland
8. Germany
9. Netherlands
10. France



Chocolate Consumers


1. Switzerland
2. UK
3. Belgium
4. Germany
5. Ireland
6. Denmark
7. Norway
8. Austraia
9. Poland
10. USA



The most common causes of accidental death (Deaths per year)

1. Motor vehicle crashes - 43,200
2. Falls - 14,900
3. Poisoning - 8,600
4. Drowning - 4,000
5. Fires and burns - 3,700
6. Suffocation - 3,300



Best Selling Cars


1. Ford F-Series
2. Chevrolet Silverdo
3. Toyota Camry
4. Dodge Ram
5. Honda Accord
6. Honda Civic
7. Ford Explorer
8. Nissan Altima
9. Dodge Caravan
10. GMC Sierra

Various Interesting Facts-2



There are 200,000,000 insects for every one human.


It takes more calories to eat a piece of celery than the celery had in it to begin with.


The world’s largest Montessori school is in India, with 26,312 students in 2002.


Octopus have three hearts.


If you ate too many carrots, you’d turn orange.


The average person spends two weeks waiting for a traffic light to change.


1 in 2,000,000,000 people will live to be 116 or old.


The body has 2-3 million sweat glands.


Sperm whales have the biggest brains; 20 lbs.


Tiger shark embroyos fight each other in their mother’s womb. The survivor is born.


Most cats are left pawed.


250 people have fallen off the Leaning Tower of Pisa.


A Blue whale’s tongue weighs more than an elephant.


You use 14 muscles to smile and 43 to frown. Keep Smiling!.


Bamboo can grow up to 3 ft in 24 hours.


An eyeball weighs about 1 ounce.

Various Interesting Facts-1

The Statue of Liberty’s index finger is eight feet long.


Rain has never been recorded in some parts of the Atacama Desert in Chile.


A 75 year old person will have slept about 23 years.


A Boeing 747’s wing span is longer than the Wright brother’s first flight.(the Wright brother’s invented the airplane).


There are as many chickens on earth as there are humans.


One type of hummingbird weighs less than a penny.


The word “set ” has the most number of definitions in the English language;192.


Slugs have four noses.


Sharks can live up to 100 years.


Mosquitos are more attracted to the color blue than any other color.


Kangaroos can’t walk backwards.


About 75 acres of pizza are eaten in in the U.S. Everyday.


The largest recorded snowflake was 15in wide and 8in thick. It fell in
Montana in 1887.


The tip of a bullwhip moves so fast that the sound it makes is
actually a tiny sonic boom.


Former president Bill Clinton only sent 2 emails in his entire 8 year
presidency.


Koalas and humans are the only animals that have finger prints.

Things to be Avoided after Meals

Don't smoke
Experiment from experts proves that smoking a cigarette after meal is comparable to smoking 10 cigarettes (chances of cancer is higher).

Don't eat fruits immediately
Immediately eating fruits after meals will cause stomach to be bloated with air. Therefore take fruit 1-2 hr after meal or 1 hr before meal.

Don't drink tea
Because tea leaves contain a high content of acid. This substance will cause the Protein content in the food we consume to be hardened thus difficult to digest.

Don't loosen your belt
Loosening the belt after a meal will easily cause the intestine to be twisted &blocked.

Don't bathe
Bathing will cause the increase of blood flow to the hands, legs & body thus the amount of blood around the stomach will therefore decrease. This will weaken the digestive system in our stomach.

Don't walk about
People always say that after a meal walk a hundred steps and you will live till 99. In actual fact this is not true... Walking will cause the digestive system to be unable to absorb the nutrition from the food we intake.

Don't sleep immediately
The food we intake will not be able to digest properly. Thus will lead to gastric & infection in our intestine.

Self Educated Malavi Boy Builds Wind Mill





William Kamkwamba, a teenage boy in Malawi, saw a photo of a windmill in a textbook at the library and decided that if he could build one it would be useful to his village.

Mr Kamkwamba, who is now 22 years old, knocked together a turbine from spare bicycle parts, a tractor fan blade and an old shock absorber, and fashioned blades from plastic pipes, flattened by being held over a fire…

Soon the whiz kid’s 12-watt wonder was pumping power into his family’s mud brick compound…

Out went the paraffin lanterns and in came light bulbs and a circuit breaker, made from nails and magnets off an old stereo speaker, and a light switch cobbled together from bicycle spokes and flip-flop rubber.

Before long, locals were queuing up to charge their mobile phones…

Meanwhile, he installed a solar-powered mechanical pump, donated by well-wishers, above a borehole, adding water storage tanks and bringing the first potable water source to the entire region around his village.

He upgraded his original windmill to 48-volts and anchored it in concrete after its wooden base was chewed away by termites.

Jude Sheerin’s story at the BBC has more details about the life of this remarkable young man, who is now the subject of a new book, The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind

Source : bbc