Tuesday, December 29, 2009

DIRT IS GOOD


( from Economist)

Shock studies periodically expose and deplore sloppy habits. Fully 76% of kitchen sink cloths are infested with germs. One in three American men does not wash his hands after using a public lavatory.

There is nothing fixed, however, about Western fascination with dirt—or terror of it. As recently as 1965 only half of British women wore an underarm deodorant. Back in 1940 just over half of American households had a proper bathroom. In 1951 nearly two-fifths of English households lacked a bath—and not only for reasons of post-war poverty.

Regular all-over bathing, elaborated in ancient Greece and Rome and celebrated in luxurious contemporary ensuite bathrooms, was distrusted for about 400 years in the second millennium. Water was thought to carry disease into the skin; pores nicely clogged with dirt were a means to block it out. In the 17th century the European aristocracy, who washed little, wore linen shirts in order to draw out dirt from the skin instead, and heavy perfumes and oils to mask bad smells.

Has the persecution of dirt, however, gone too far? Some immunologists believe that children now growing up in hyperclean, sterile environments are failing to develop immune systems properly because of inadequate exposure to bacteria. This idea, known as the hygiene hypothesis, is a possible explanation for growing incidences of eczema and other allergic diseases in rich countries, which are rare in poorer ones. Various studies have shown that children growing up with older siblings, who bring germs into the house, or on farms, where they come into daily contact with animals, muck and unpasteurised milk, are less likely to develop hay fever or asthma, though the scientific evidence is not conclusive.

A recent experiment by dermatologists at the University of California, San Diego, suggests a molecular basis for the hygiene hypothesis. They found common bacteria living on the surface of skin that can help wounds to heal by releasing a special molecule to stop outer-skin cells getting inflamed. Bacteria-free skin, in other words, may provoke inflammation and slow healing.

First-time parents, writes Mary Ruebush, an American immunologist and author of “Why Dirt is Good”, frantically try to keep their babies away from dirt. “When that pacifier falls on the floor, the parents cannot throw themselves on it quickly enough to wash it off, soak it in bleach, run it through the dishwasher, the microwave, you name it.” The trouble is, she adds, such a baby will not have the contact with germs that are needed to build up a strong immune system. Children rather should be encouraged to play in the dirt.

Researchers have even found what they think might be dirt that can make people happy


Some researchers in Britain have even found what they think might be dirt that can make people happy. An experiment on mice showed that certain bacteria normally found in soil stimulated neurons in the brain that produce serotonin, which influences mood. The results, says Chris Lowry, at Bristol University, “leave us wondering if we shouldn’t all be spending more time playing in the dirt.” From demon and pest to guarantor of happiness and childhood health? Not bad for humble grime.

Friday, December 25, 2009

My Review: 3 Idiots

What a delightful movie !

The stories and the narrative of Dil Chahta Hai, Munna Bhai and Tare Zameen Par flow through this film, seamlessly making you feel it is one long continuum.....

The acting is of high class, the dialogues are modern -day, urban, the underlying message of PURSUE WHAT YOU LIKE is very "in with the times " and in keeping with the ethos of a Nation on the verge of great times....

Boman Irani plays a longish role with great aplomb as do Amir Khan, Madhavan and the third "idiot".....

The IIM, B campus looks cute, as do some of the locales in Ladakh...particularly the turquoise blue lake( towards the end)....

The over-done caricature of a South Indian student jars as does the length of the film.... a few sub-plots ( Javed Jafri, Child Delivery scene) could have been deleted to condense the film....
Hirani does a good job once again( after the 2 Munna Bhais) but I, for one , can't figure out his obsession with repeated display of urinating men and toilet scenes.... surely, he has managed the humour content quite well even without those ( gross) scenes....

All in all.....Amir Khan maintains his image of a sincere and serious film actor and doles out a good movie..... some of the other Khans will never ever reach his standards ( with the exception of , of course, Yusuf Khan !) , unfortunately !

Thursday, December 17, 2009

Great Pictures of 2009

http://www.boston.com/bigpicture/2009/12/2009_in_photos_part_1_of_3.html


Great pictures of 2009....pl click this link to see some great pictures.....these are in 3 parts, each with 40 snaps....

RSK

Thursday, December 10, 2009

Marriage in Heaven !

On their way to get married, a young couple are involved in a fatal car accident. They find themselves sitting outside the Pearly Gates waiting for St Peter to admit them to Heaven.

While waiting, they begin to wonder: Could they possibly get married in Heaven? When St Peter shows up, they ask him.

St Peter says, "I don't know. This is the first time anyone has asked. Let me go and find out."

The couple sit and wait for an answer... For a couple of months. As they wait, they discuss whether IF they were allowed to get married in Heaven, they SHOULD actually go ahead with it, what with the eternal aspect of it all.

"What if it doesn't work?" they wonder. "Are we stuck together FOREVER?"

After yet another month, St Peter finally returns looking somewhat bedraggled.

"Yes," he informs the couple, "you CAN get married in Heaven."

"Great!" say the couple. "But we were just wondering, what if things don't work out? Could we also get a divorce in Heaven?"

St Peter, red-faced with anger, slams his clipboard on the ground.

"What's wrong?" ask the frightened couple.

"Oh, COME ON!!" St Peter shouts. "It took me three months to find a PRIEST up here! Do you have any idea how long it'll take me to find a lawyer?"

Monday, December 7, 2009

CricTrivia


When Murali bowled to Tendulkar in Ahmedabad, it was apparently only the third time that the highest wicket-taker in Tests had bowled to the leading run-scorer. Who was involved in the other two instances?


The previous occasion was during the third Test between Australia and West Indies
in Adelaide in November 2004, when the then leading bowler, Shane Warne, bowled to Brian Lara, who had surpassed Allan Border as Test cricket's top run-scorer during his innings of 226 there. The only other time it happened was back in 1886-87, in the first Test in Sydney, when Arthur Shrewsbury of England faced up to the Aussie "Demon", Fred Spofforth. Going into that match Shrewsbury had 903 runs and Spofforth 94 wickets.

Both wicketkeepers scored centuries in the Ahmedabad Test. Has this ever happened before?

Rather surprisingly, there is only one previous instance of both wicketkeepers scoring a century in the same Test. It happened in St John's in May 2002, when Ridley Jacobs made 118 for West Indies, and Ajay Ratra scored 115 not out (his only Test century) for India.

Recently India completed their 100th Test win. Which player has appeared in most of these wins?


Sachin Tendulkar has appeared in 53 of India's Test victories, while Anil Kumble played in 43. Rahul Dravid has taken part in 46 Test victories so far. VVS Laxman 38 times, Sourav Ganguly was on the winning side 37 times, . Of players whose careers ended before 2000, Kapil Dev led the way with 24 wins, one more than Sunil Gavaskar.

Sachin Tendulkar reached the milestone of 30,000 runs in international cricket in the Ahmedabad Test. Has anyone else made 25,000?


Sachin Tendulkar did indeed pass the milestone of 30,000 runs in all international cricket (Tests, ODIs and Twenty20 internationals) during the Ahmedabad Test last week. No one else has yet passed 25,000: Ricky Ponting is next with 24,057. Brian Lara, Rahul Dravid, Jacques Kallis, Sanath Jayasuriya and Inzamam-ul-Haq have also all passed 20,000 international runs all told.

Ricky Ponting just won his 91st Test. Has anyone finished on the winning side more often?


Actually there's one person ahead of
Ricky Ponting, who did indeed finish on the winning side for the 91st time in a Test against West Indies at Brisbane last week: his old team-mate Shane Warne won 92 Tests. Ponting might well overtake him during the current Australian season. Not surprisingly, perhaps, this particular list is dominated by recent Australians: Steve Waugh finished on the winning side 86 times, Glenn McGrath 84, Adam Gilchrist 73 (out of 96 Tests played), Mark Waugh 72, Matthew Hayden 71 and Justin Langer 70. Next comes the first non-Aussie: South Africa's Mark Boucher, with 65 wins, one ahead of his long-time team-mate Jacques Kallis.


Saturday, December 5, 2009

Casual Dating !


Go To Toilet !


Sign on the window of Currency Exchange Counter in Thailand !
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Sunday, November 22, 2009

A good website on Hindustani Classical Music.....

http://hindustanivocalconcerts.blogspot.com/

Without Comment.....


"A woman needs a man like a fish needs a bicycle"
Irina Dunn

"Normal is getting dressed in clothes that you buy for work and driving through traffic in a car that you are still paying for--in order to get to the job you need to pay for the clothes and the car, and the house you leave vacant all day so you can afford to live in it."

Ellen DeGeneres

A dog typing away at a computer tells his canine buddy, "On the Internet, nobody knows you're a dog ".

New Yorker cartoon

You can't just turn on creativity like a faucet. You have to be in the right mood.
-What mood is that?
-Last-minute panic.

-Calvin and Hobbes

Saturday, November 21, 2009

Thursday, November 19, 2009

Pet Rules--Memo to the Family Dog and Cat



1. When I say move, it means go someplace else. It does not mean switch positions with each other so there are still two of you in the way.

2. The dishes on the floor are yours and contain your food. All other dishes are mine and contain my food. (Please note: placing a paw or nose-print in the middle of my dinner does not stake your claim on it, nor do I find it aesthetically pleasing in any way.)

3. The stairway was not designed by NASCAR and is not a racetrack. Beating me to the bottom is not the object. Tripping me doesn't help because I fall faster than you can run.

4. I cannot buy anything bigger than a king size bed. Locate your inner beast and remember that sleeping animals can actually curl up in a ball, so it is not necessary to sleep perpendicular to each other, stretched out to the fullest extent possible.

5. My compact discs are not miniature Frisbees.

6. For the last time, humans like to use the bathroom alone. If by some miracle I beat you there and manage to get the door shut, it won't help to claw, whine, meow, bite the knob, or get your paw under the edge and try to pull the door open. (Trust me, I have been using the bathroom for years...canine or feline attendance is not mandatory.)

7. When you see me asleep on the couch, it is not funny to make a sudden leap onto my stomach and drop a chew toy, bone or jingle ball on my crotch, no matter how much that makes other family members laugh.

8. Dog: Don't think for a minute that making a sad face and whimpering pathetically will get you out of trouble when I find a puddle of pee on the carpet. The face and the whimpering only validate that you knew it was wrong when you did it.

9. Cat: My sitting down to bite into a juicy sandwich is not a signal for you to begin gagging loudly and then hocking up the most disgusting hairball in history.

10. Dog and Cat: The proper order is kiss me, then go lick yourself. I cannot stress this enough.

To pacify you I have posted the following message on our front door:

Rules for Non-Pet Owners Who Visit and Complain About Our Pets:

1. They live here; you don't.

2. If you don't want their hair on your clothes, stay off the furniture.

3. I like my pet(s) better than I like most people.

4. To you it's an animal. To me, it's an adopted child who is short, hairy, walks on all fours and is speech-challenged.

5. Dogs and cats are better than kids. They eat less, are easier to train, usually come when called, don't ask for money, never drive your car, don't hang out with losers, don't drink or smoke, and don't worry about the latest fashions.

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Sunday, November 15, 2009

7-Years Old Wonder.......

Pondy Girl Can Name Medicines For 1,000 Ailments

Bosco Dominique | TNN


Puducherry: While other children her age pore over comics, sevenyear-old Bakkiashri Baskar reads tomes on anatomy, pharmacology and ophthalmology.
Ask this Std III student about managing haemorrhage while performing open heart surgery, and she can tell you the correct medication in a trice. Bakkiashri, who has an impeccable memory and knows the right medicine for over 1,000 ailments right from a headache to dreaded diseases aspires to become the world’s youngest doctor. A host of doctors in Puducherry, who tested her skills, were spellbound and some have given written testimony to her talent.
“It was little difficult to read the books in the beginning, but it turned out to be fun. I really love to read medical books and magazines,” says Bakkiashri, who has never been to a cinema theatre. She doesn’t watch television either. Her father M Baskar, a graduate in zoology, plans to approach medical institutions that are willing to relax the age limit for Bakkiashri to sit for examinations
to obtain a degree in medicine. It all began last year, when Baskar realised that his daughter has a good memory and started questioning her about what she wanted to be when she grew up. “She said she wanted to become a doctor and find a permanent cure for cancer. She requested me to buy books so that she could begin her studies,” says Baskar, who spent almost Rs 40,000 on books and within a year, the child prodigy started memorising ailments and their medication.

CHILD PRODIGY: Std III student Bakkiashri with father M Baskar in Puducherry. Bakkiashri has an impeccable memory and aspires to become the world’s youngest doctor.

Brooklyn Bridge


Cris-cross mesh @ Brooklyn Bridge

My Snap- Oct 09, NY
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Saturday, November 14, 2009

Peter on Sachin.....




..............And yet, even this, the runs, the majesty, the thrills, does not capture his achievement. Reflect upon his circumstances and then marvel at his feat. Here is a man obliged to put on disguises so that he can move around the streets, a fellow able to drive his cars only in the dead of night for fear or creating a commotion, a father forced to take his family to Iceland on holiday, a person whose entire adult life has been lived in the eye of a storm. Throughout he has been public property, India's proudest possession, a young man and yet also a source of joy for millions, a sportsman and yet, too, an expression of a vast and ever-changing nation.....

Somehow he has managed to keep the world in its rightful place. Somehow he has raised children who relish his company and tease him about his batting. Whenever he loses his wicket in the 90s, a not uncommon occurrence, his boy asks why he does not "hit a sixer".

Somehow he has emerged with an almost untarnished reputation. Inevitably mistakes have been made. Something about a car, something else about a cricket ball, and suggestions that he had stretched the facts to assist his pal Harbhajan Singh. But then he is no secular saint. It's enough that he is expected to bat better than anyone else. It's hardly fair to ask him to match Mother Teresa as well.................

Wednesday, November 11, 2009


My snap of New York Harbour skyline
on a colourful Oct evening
RSK
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Monday, November 9, 2009

Casual Dress @ Office !

The History Of Casual Day

Memo No. 1: Effective immediately, the company is adopting Fridays as Casual Day so that employees may express their diversity.

Memo No. 2: Spandex and leather micro-miniskirts are not appropriate attire for Casual Day. Neither are string ties, rodeo belt buckles or moccasins.

Memo No. 3: Casual Day refers to dress only, not attitude. When planning Friday's wardrobe, remember image is a key to our success.

Memo No. 4: A seminar on how to dress for Casual Day will be held at 4 p.m. Friday in the cafeteria. Fashion show to follow. Attendance is mandatory.

Memo No. 5: As an outgrowth of Friday's seminar, a 14-member Casual Day Task Force has been appointed to prepare guidelines for proper dress.

Memo No. 6: The Casual Day Task Force has completed a 30-page manual. A copy of "Relaxing Dress Without Relaxing Company Standards" has been mailed to each employee. Please review the chapter "You Are What You Wear" and consult the "home casual" versus "business casual" checklist before leaving for work each Friday. If you have doubts about the appropriateness of an item of clothing, contact your CDTF representative before 7 a.m. on Friday.

Memo No. 7: Because of lack of participation, Casual Day has been discontinued, effective immediately.

Bad TV

“Television induces mental disorders such as enhanced aggression, shortened attention span and reduced ability to communicate, and these disorders involve an even greater social cost than the obesity and lethargy that are TV’s normal physical side-effects.... As a threat to the nation’s health it stands far higher than alcohol, drugs or tobacco.”

- Roger Scruton, Journalist, London

Saturday, November 7, 2009

The New Science of Temptation ?


What happens when Harvard scientists use a brain scanner to look for the devil inside?

By Piercarlo Valdesolo

The power to resist temptation has been extolled by philosophers, psychologists, teachers, coaches, and mothers. Anyone with advice on how you should live your life has surely spoken to you of its benefits. It is the path to the good life, professional and personal satisfaction, social adjustment and success, performance under pressure, and the best way for any child to avoid a penetrating stare and a cold dinner. Of course, this assumes that our natural urges are a thing to be resisted – that there is a devil inside, luring you to cheat, offend, err, and annoy. New research has begun to question this assumption.

A new brain imaging study by Josh Greene and Joe Paxton at Harvard University published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences suggests that what separates the well-behaved from the poorly-behaved might not be the ability to control your temptations but rather what kind of temptations you have. For example, foregoing the opportunity for short-term gain and satisfaction, whether it is a delicious slice of tiramisu or that wallet stuffed with cash you stumbled across in the empty parking lot, will depend more on the nature of your automatic urges than your ability to control them.

Greene and Paxton were interested in why people behave honestly when confronted with the opportunity to anonymously cheat for personal gain. They considered two possible explanations. First, there is the “Will” hypothesis: in order to behave honestly people must actively resist the temptation to cheat. In other words, returning the wallet depends on your ability to stifle your desire to take the cash and buy yourself something nice. Alternatively, there is the “Grace” hypothesis: honest behavior results from the absence of temptation. Returning the wallet requires no particular ability to control your treacherous urges – the urge simply isn’t there.

These two hypotheses make competing predictions regarding the brain regions activated when acting honestly as well as the time it should take participants to decide to act honestly. If “Will” is correct then people who choose to act honestly should exhibit heightened activity in brain regions responsible for cognitive control (presumably resulting from the struggle to ignore immediate desires). But if “Grace” is right then no such increase should occur. Furthermore, people should take a longer time to decide to act honestly if doing so requires a conscious act of “Will,” but a relatively shorter time to act if all you need is a bit of “Grace.”

In order to test these possibilities the researchers measured neural activity in an fMRI machine while participants played a computerized game wherein they could gain money by predicting the outcome of coin flips. Correctly guess heads or tails, you get some cash. In one condition, participants recorded their predictions before seeing any of the flips, precluding the opportunity to cheat. In the other condition, participants were rewarded based on self-reported accuracy after the flips, and therefore could fudge their predictions in accordance with the outcome of the flip. I got 100 percent correct, Mr. Experimenter, must be my lucky day!

Consistent with the “Grace” hypothesis, those who acted honestly (who guessed wrong and self-reported as much) showed no increased activity in control-related areas relative to others who guessed wrong but did not have the opportunity to cheat. Honest reporting of scores, then, didn’t require will-power, these participants simply did not feel the urge to cheat. Reaction time data further supported “Grace” showing that participants who acted honestly took no longer to do so, on average, when they had the opportunity to cheat than when they did not. The authors suggest that these findings demonstrate the human capacity to, at least temporarily, achieve a state of “moral grace” – a state devoid of selfish temptation.

But what good does this state serve? Why would we be averse, or even indifferent, to cheating when we could benefit from it? Perhaps because our automatic responses have evolved in social environments where self-interested behavior in the short-term has not always lead to personal gains over the long-term. Gaining a reputation as a cheat would be a one-way ticket to ostracism. Having intuitions sensitive to equity and the needs of others would promote the formation and maintenance of cooperative relationships that would ultimately be of benefit to the individual.

Greene and Paxton’s findings fit nicely with this idea, as well as past research showing that many of our intuitions regarding equity/fairness actually promote prosocial behavior, and we overcome them at our peril. This is not only because of the positive social consequences they confer, but also because the cognitive processes we use to overcome them can besusceptible to bias, motivated reasoning, justification and rationalization.

This is not to say that self-control is an impediment to social life. Clearly certain desires and urges are better off ignored. The psychologist Dan Gilbert has found that participants, when given the choice between receiving $50 now or $60 a month from now, prefer the immediate reward. The strong desire for cash in hand trumps the thought that you’d be better off if you waited for the higher sum. In this case, if it weren’t for those pesky urges, life would be much easier – you could more effectively plan for the long-term. But what’s also clear is that many of our urges guide us towards decision and actions that, while contrary to short-term goals, are in our long-term interests. Given Greene and Paxton’s findings, it seems that at least in some situations the best way to consider the future is by not considering it at all.

Thursday, November 5, 2009

Why should Saudis ban an anti-Israeli series??


Oct 22nd 2009
From The Economist print edition


Turkey is selling its televisual wares all over the region
AP
AP

Israeli baddies on Turkish television

BAD vibrations between Turkey and Israel have been worsened by a series on one of Turkey’s state-run television channels showing Israeli soldiers shooting Palestinian babies in a place that looks like Gaza. Yet anti-Jewish propaganda has long been a staple of a popular series called “Valley of the Wolves”. In a recent episode two Turkish scientists on the verge of building weapons that Turkey usually buys from Israel get bumped off by Kurds on Israel’s payroll.

But it is unfettered romance rather than Jew-bashing that is catching the imagination of millions of Arab viewers. Particularly alluring is a soap opera called “Noor” that has been dubbed in Arabic and was broadcast last year by a pan-Arab, Saudi-owned satellite network, MBC. Starring an emancipated woman and a blue-eyed blonde former male model, “Noor” has been credited with a recent surge in Arab tourists to Turkey. Many head straight for a Bosporus villa (now rented by tour operators) where the drama was filmed.

Yet the marital bliss portrayed in “Noor” is said to have prompted a rash of divorces in the Arab world, as female viewers compare their own husbands to the hero, Muhannad, who washes up the dishes. In Jordan a man is said to have dumped his wife after he caught her with Muhannad’s picture on her mobile phone. In Syria another did the same when his wife apparently said, “I want to sleep with Muhannad for just one night and then die.”

All of this has prompted Saudi Arabia’s grand mufti to call for a boycott of the Turkish series, which he called “evil”. But MBC is unfazed. It has snapped up the rights to a score of other Turkish television dramas.

Mantra

"I constantly see people rise in life who are not the smartest -- sometimes not even the most diligent. But they are learning machines; they go to bed every night a little wiser than when they got up. And, boy, does that habit help, particularly when you have a long run ahead of you."

- Charlie Munge

Thursday, October 29, 2009

Simple Analogy







An economics professor at a local college made a statement that he had never failed a single student before but had once failed an entire class.

That class had insisted that socialism worked and that no one would be poor and no one would be rich, a great equalizer.

The professor then said, "OK, we will have an experiment in this class on socialism. All grades would be averaged and everyone would receive the same grade so no one would fail and no one would receive an A.

After the first test, the grades were averaged and everyone got a B.

The students who studied hard were upset and the students who studied little were happy.

As the second test rolled around, the students who studied little had studied even less and the ones who studied hard decided they wanted a free ride too so they studied little.

The second test average was a D! No one was happy.

When the 3rd test rolled around, the average was an F.



The scores never increased as bickering, blame and name-calling all resulted in hard feelings and no one would study for the benefit of anyone else.

All failed, to their great surprise, and the professor told them that socialism would also ultimately fail because when the reward is great, the effort to succeed is great but when government takes the reward away, no one will try or want to succeed.


Could not be any simpler than that.




What a profound short little paragraph that says it all

"You cannot legislate the poor into freedom by legislating the wealthy out of freedom. What one person receives without working for, another person must work for without receiving. The government cannot give to anybody anything that the government does not first take from somebody else. When half of the people get the idea that they do not have to work because the other half is going to take care of them, and when the other half gets the idea that it does no good to work because somebody else is going to get what they work for,that my dear friend, is about the end of any nation. You cannot multiply wealth by dividing it."

~~~~ Dr. Adrian Rogers, 1931

Soley On Merits !

Taking his seat in his chambers, the judge faced the opposing lawyers.

"So," he said, "I have been presented, by both of you, with a bribe."

Both lawyers squirmed uncomfortably.

"You, attorney Leon, gave me $15,000. And you, attorney Campos, gave me $10,000."

The judge reached into his pocket and pulled out a check. He handed it to Leon. "Now then, I'm returning $5,000, and we're going to decide this case solely on its merits!"

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

CricTrivia

I noticed that in a Test in Sri Lanka in 1994, Waqar Younis and Wasim Akram bowled throughout an all-out innings of 71. How often has this happened, and what's the highest total involved?


The match you're talking about was the third Test,
in Kandy, in August 1994: Wasim Akram took 4 for 32 in 14.2 overs, and Waqar Younis 6 for 24 in 14. There has been one similar instance of two bowlers operating unchanged throughout a completed innings since: in Port-of-Spain in 1998-99, Glenn McGrath and Jason Gillespie bowled throughout West Indies' second innings of 51. In all, it has happened 24 times in Tests, although only six of those instances have come since 1912. The highest total that has featured just two bowlers was also the first such instance - England's 133 in Sydney in 1881-82, when "Joey" Palmer took 7 for 68 in 58 (four-ball) overs, and Edwin Evans 3 for 64 from 57.


Which Test cricketer is nicknamed "Scooter"?


I think the man you're after is the South African opener
Herschelle Gibbs, who has now played 90 Tests and almost 250 one-day internationals. Gibbs made his first-class debut (and scored 77) for Western Province B in 1990-91, when he was only 16, still at school, and too young to drive. Some of his team-mates joked that since he didn't have a car they'd have to buy him a scooter to get to matches... and the name stuck.

What is the highest Test partnership that was ended by a run-out?


The biggest one in Tests was the stand of 446 between
Conrad Hunte and Garry Sobers for West Indies against Pakistan in Kingston in 1957-58. Hunte had made 260: Sobers went on to break the then-Test record, finishing with 365 not out. Hunte later admitted that he was distracted by the thought of breaking the world-record second-wicket partnership (451 at the time) and tried a quick single, thinking that the fielders would be exhausted - but the man who picked the ball up at mid-on and threw the stumps down was a fresh substitute,Ijaz Butt (now the Pakistan board's president)

Monday, October 12, 2009

Why are You Crying?



When I went to lunch today, I noticed an old lady sitting on a park bench sobbing her eyes out. I stopped and asked her what was wrong. She said,

'I have a 22-year-old husband at home. He makes love to me every morning and then gets up and makes me pancakes, sausage, fresh fruit and freshly ground coffee.'

I said, 'Well, then why are you crying?' She said, 'He makes me homemade soup for lunch and my favourite brownies and then makes love to me for half the afternoon.

I said, 'Well, why are you crying?' She said, 'For dinner he makes me a gourmet meal with wine and my favourite dessert and then makes love to me until 2:00a.m.'

I said, 'Well, why in the world would you be crying?' She said, 'I can't remember where I live!'

Saturday, October 10, 2009

Mobile Phone Numbers in India will also start with 8080..


Reliance Communications on Friday said it has been allotted a brand new 8080 series by the Department of Telecommunications for roll-out in Mumbai.

"With the contemporary 9 series being exhausted over the last 14 years, we are now rolling out the 8080 series," Reliance Communications said in a statement.

Reliance Communications is offering the 8080 series on both its pre-paid and post-paid platforms across its GSM network.

How much bad luck can one have?


Great Story.wmvGreat Story.wmv
3567K Download

Thursday, October 8, 2009

Married to Blackberry, Divorced from family.......




8 Oct 2009, 0557 hrs IST, Ravi Teja Sharma, ET Bureau

NEW DELHI:

Head bowed, hands together, thumbs going... the typical mannerisms of an inveterate smartphone user— whether in the boardroom or the bedroom — has now made an entry into the Urban Dictionary:

The BlackBerry Prayer.

That prayer is getting answered, and increasingly, the results are disastrous. The device — be it the BlackBerry, the iPhone or just about any other smartphone — that promised a world of convenience and freedom to millions of busy professionals is now threatening to make their relationships unravel as users increasingly get addicted to their 24x7 connectivity.

Psychologists and social scientists that ET spoke to for this story said smartphone-triggered divorces are on the rise, especially in the last one year. Smartphone sales were up 27% this year so far over the corresponding period in 2008, and is slated to jump 30-35% in 2010, says Gartner.


The complainants in these cases are mostly women who feel their husbands are busy checking mails or updating their Facebook status or tweeting, completely oblivious to the family at the dinner table. They start the day heads bowed checking messages, never mind the kids waiting in vain for the morning wish or the wife the peck on the cheek.

“This is a recent phenomenon,” says senior advocate Geeta Luthra, a specialist in marital separation cases.

“A year ago, no one ever came to me saying ‘my husband doesn’t talk to me because he is always on the phone’. They don’t suspect their husbands of infidelity. But they surely blame the phone for cracking their relationships,” she says.

Kiran (name changed) recently filed for divorce from her CEO husband, and deposed in the court, that her husband’s smartphone addiction was the most important reason. “That device is like his wife,” she said in court.

Delhi-based psychologist Sanjay Chugh says this is a case of classical dependence. “Such people want to know if they have been contacted in the last few minutes, or in some cases, even in the last few seconds. If they find there has been no contact, there is a tinge of disappointment and anxiety,” he says.

Smartphones exploded in the Indian market around five years ago, with the launch of Canadian firm RIM’s BlackBerry. A horde of similar products followed, mostly notably Apple’s popular iPhone.

Research firm Ascendia estimates that the smartphone market in India stood at around 5 million units in 2008. Gartner expects such devices to have a 4-4.5% share in total mobile phone sales in India in 2009.

In developed markets, the addictive nature of smartphones have led to the BlackBerry, the most popular of such devices, being dubbed the Crackberry, a reference to crack cocaine. In fact, the internet is replete with personal accounts of smartphone addiction and ways to overcome it, a la quitting cigarettes.

In the US, President Obama himself is said to be a compulsive BlackBerry user, so much so that the Secret Service had to amend rules to let the man pursue his passion. RIM declined to divulge its sales figures for India, but a rival phone maker says of the 90 million phones in use in the country today, some 2% (around 180,000) are high-end phones.

According to Comscore, which tracks social networking trends worldwide, India is among the fastest-growing markets in this area. The total internet audience in the country in August 2009 was 35,432,000, up 17% on year-ago levels. Social networking audience in the same period grew 21% to 22,259,000. The number of Facebook users grew 220% to 81,54,000, while those for Orkut grew 34% to 152,76,000. Twitter users grew 2435% to 1,098,000.

Not all these people access social networking sites using cellphones, but the numbers clearly indicate a surge in usage. Sure, for every Crackberry addict, there are three who vouch how smartphones have made their lives easier. For many senior executives, using the phone for texting, social networking and checking emails, is also a stressbuster besides a corporate companion. “Such people find this a way to relax after a tiring day at work,” says Dr Harish Shetty, social psychiatrist with Mumbai-based Dr LH Hiranandani Hospital.

“But eventually, these can become bigger issues as stress points emerge leading to marital disharmony,” adds Dr Sandeep Vohra, senior consultant psychiatrist at Delhi’s Apollo Hospital. Psychiatrists say Crackberry addicts suffer from wanting to “broadcast to the world” all the time. “This gives them the feeling of one-upmanship, especially if they get comments,” says Mr Chugh. “What’s more, such people never agree they are addicted. They have a valid rationale — that they are working.”

Dr Shetty points out that if there is an addiction, there will be a remedy. So, many corporate families are trying to take assertive action, by coming together, once the user realises his problem (addiction). “Kids are the best to regulate the use of the BlackBerry,” he says, citing a case where the family decided that the father, once he reached home, would deposit his phone with the kids, who will then regulate its use during the evening. And for those already separated, they have the phone for company......

(from Economic Times)