You are here : Community » Forums » General Discussions » Random Threads
Today's Posts | Search Forums | My Messages

Random Threads

#1 29-Aug, 2009 03:03 PM
Bobin
Best-seller
Joined Date: 05 Dec 2008
Location: Navi Mumbai
Posts: 778
Likes: 0

This thread is for all those Threads which get no post  or r very small theards or for those posts which u think u dont know were to post ur post & ur confused or don't like to open a theard for ur post as u think its not need u can post it over here.

After posting dont forget to add its source.




Everybody wants to ride with you in the Limo, but what you need it somebody who will take the bus with you when the Limo breaks down - Oprah Winfrey
0 members liked this post
 
#2 29-Aug, 2009 03:07 PM
Bobin
Best-seller
Joined Date: 05 Dec 2008
Location: Navi Mumbai
Posts: 778
Likes: 0

Toyota considers introducing Daihatsu cars in India

Toyota Motor Corporation (TMC) may introduce its small-car brand, Daihatsu, in India in the coming years. Daihatsu is a Toyota Group company and is Japan's largest mini-car maker, with a presence in over a 100 countries. Its small cars are getting a very good response in markets like Indonesia and Malaysia, and Toyota officials are talking internally to bring it to India, said Mr Akira Okabe, Senior Managing Director and member of the TMC board.
Read Full Article »

http://www.daihatsu.com/index.html

Honda City attracts potential Jazz customers

Sales of the Honda City have seen an increase since the launch of Honda Siel's new premium hatchback, the Honda Jazz. According to media reports, a number of customers who come to Honda showrooms to see the Jazz, end up buying the City. The major reason for people's reluctance to buy the snazzy hatchback is its forbidding price tag. The Jazz is priced between Rs 7.4 lakh and Rs 7.8 lakh, while the City, which is a bigger car, is priced only slightly higher at Rs 8.8 lakh. Honda sold over 2,000 units of the Jazz in June, while sales in July fell to just above 1,000 units.
Read Full Article »

Source : Driveinside.com




Everybody wants to ride with you in the Limo, but what you need it somebody who will take the bus with you when the Limo breaks down - Oprah Winfrey
0 members liked this post
 
#3 31-Aug, 2009 04:25 PM
Bobin
Best-seller
Joined Date: 05 Dec 2008
Location: Navi Mumbai
Posts: 778
Likes: 0

Trouble Sleeping? Just Breathe

If your mind is racing and you are having difficulty falling asleep, a few minutes of simple but effective breathing exercises can help calm your nervous system on a chemical level and lead to greater success in hitting the sack. The awareness and control of breath has been a central component of yoga, martial arts and Taoism for thousands of years. There are dozens of different methods and exercises you can explore through a good teacher or book. The practice of breath control in yoga is called pranayama. I'll detail a simple pranayama exercise here that is particularly effective for falling asleep called alternate nostril breathing (that's "nadi shodana" for the Sanskrit posse out there).

Alternate nostril breathing is a great way to clear obstructed nostrils, balance the yin and yang energy of the body and focusing the busy mind on the present for a deliberate and calming exercise. When our nostrils are unobstructed, we involuntarily alternate breathing through one or the other about every two hours. Breathing through your right nostril stimulates the left side of the brain (intellectual, analytical, rational thought) and prepares the body for physical action (yang energy). Breathing through your left nostril stimulates the right side of the brain (creative, emotional thought) and prepares the body for passive mental activity (yin energy). If both nostrils are not clear, breathing will become imbalanced and so will the energy in your body.

When you are feeling restless at bedtime, head outside (weather permitting obviously, but even in wintertime, you can certainly spend a couple minutes on a balcony or porch in brisk air), sit in a comfortable chair and begin the exercise. You will likely have a really hard time focusing your mind on only the breathing exercise. Establish a rule that whenever your mind wanders away from the breathing exercise to other random thoughts, you have to start over. With practice, you'll develop the esteemed ability to relax and center -- not just to calm the mind for bed but any time the stresses of life are closing in. 

Alternate nostril breathing is performed as follows: Take one hand up to your face for blocking nostrils. For example, your right thumb will close off your right nostril while your right index or middle finger will close off your left nostril. Block off the right nostril and inhale fully (notice how your inhale and exhale will be slower since you are only using one nostril). Pause at the completion of your inhale and switch nostrils by using your finger to block the left nostril and releasing your thumb from the right nostril. Exhale through the right nostril, inhale through the right nostril, then pause and switch to exhale through the left nostril. Thus, you switch nostrils in the middle of the breath cycle. To complete a cycle of 10 breaths, count each inhale/exhale as one. After your complete your breathing session, you can return to bed with a calm brain and hopefully induce a good night's sleep.

For more information on How to Sleep Better, visit LIVESTRONG.COM.

Source:Yahoo




Everybody wants to ride with you in the Limo, but what you need it somebody who will take the bus with you when the Limo breaks down - Oprah Winfrey
0 members liked this post
 
#4 01-Sep, 2009 12:42 PM
Bobin
Best-seller
Joined Date: 05 Dec 2008
Location: Navi Mumbai
Posts: 778
Likes: 0

Bollywood dreams shattered, many strugglers turn to crime

A budding scriptwriter snatches chains to meet his ailing mother's medical expenses. Desperate for a car, a struggling actor forces his wife, also an actor, into prostitution. A 21-year-old actor from the Oscar-winning Slumdog Millionaire is arrested for extortion and threatening to kill a casting director.

The case of Atul Adagle (28), a small-time lyricist who was arrested by the Kandivli police on charges of chain-snatching on Sunday, highlighted a dark truth that many young Bollywood aspirants live with. Work in the film industry was elusive and Adagle needed money to pay for his ailing mother's medicines. His is a story that many Bollywood aspirants or 'strugglers' identify with. Their big-screen dreams shattered, many take to crime to pay the rent or maintain expensive lifestyles to showcase themselves to filmmakers.

Adagle's motive may seem straight out of a Hindi film, but police say many small-time actors have started taking the shortest route to a luxurious life: petty crime like robbery and even serious crimes like extortion. "There are many aspirants and less work," said Police Inspector Dattaray Sankhe of Oshiwara, where most aspiring actors and junior artists stay. "Not everybody gets a break. Many resort to crime to fulfil their needs."

Those who have made it after years of struggle say the main reason is the stress of maintaining the glamour quotient the industry demands. "Newcomers often cannot handle the pressure; they drift towards crime to fulfill basic needs like paying the rent of a flat in Lokhandwala Complex," said producer Pahlaj Nihalini. "To get famous, people need to show off. For that, they need a constant flow of money," said Amitabh Gupta, additional commissioner of police (western region). "It is not a new phenomenon, but these days there have been more cases involving small-time actors."

Dr B.V. Bhosale, a sociologist at Pune University, said the involvement of aspiring actors and models in crime was the result of "accumulative frustration". "These people are not very successful; there is always a sense of insecurity. They take to crime thinking that they have been rejected by society.," said Bhosale. "Moreover, once they get a taste of this 'false world', they don't want to come out. They would do anything to maintain their lifestyles."

Those who have been through the rejection and frustration on their road to stardom say the pressure is too much to handle. "If you don't get to eat one meal a day, it's fine. But you need to wear designer clothes to get noticed," said actor Nandini Jumani, who struggled in the industry for over two years. "In a party, you have to buy a drink. Even if you stay in a rented house, you have to show off by travelling in a car and joining the best gym in the area." Jumani added that often newcomers get used and are sucked into crime, often becoming victims themselves.

Source-Yahoo




Everybody wants to ride with you in the Limo, but what you need it somebody who will take the bus with you when the Limo breaks down - Oprah Winfrey
Last Updated: 01-Sep, 2009 12:50 PM, by Bobin
0 members liked this post
 
#5 04-Sep, 2009 11:42 AM
Bobin
Best-seller
Joined Date: 05 Dec 2008
Location: Navi Mumbai
Posts: 778
Likes: 0

The psychos, misfits, criminally incompetent in every office revealed

Tue, Sep 1 01:20 PM

Melbourne, September 1 (ANI): Suggesting that a person may actually find people surrounding him at work awful, a book author has highlighted various ways in which one may have to face bad office behaviour.

"People actually get away with really bad behaviour and they do it all the time," the Courier Mail quoted Michael Stanford, author of Inhuman Resources: A guide to the psychos, misfits and criminally incompetent in every office, as saying.

"They get away with it because human nature is that we sort of accept things after awhile.

"At first we're shocked and then we start to accept it. Over time, companies and cultures start to accept this sort of behaviour and even reward it," he added.

He believes that his book may help reassure 'the nice people' in the office that the bullies, crazies and lazies are actually as bad as they seem.

"I think it's important that you give people the opportunity to look at behaviour and think 'that's just not acceptable,'" he said.

But Stanford, who admits seeing himself in a few of the types, also suggests people not to be too harsh.

"We've all done things we probably shouldn't have in the name of paying the mortgage or thinking 'I should cover myself here,'" he says.

Here are some of the most common office types, and how to handle them:

1. 'I'm disappointed in you' person

"Those sorts of people like to patronise people who are younger, like to lecture them and tell you you're doing it wrong. They actually do it for their own sake. I think it was like mental harassment, there was one point where I actually had to hide to avoid being mentored," says Stanford.

2. The 'I'm actually really nice' person

The author says that this is one the most common office misfits, but also the most toxic.

"That's the person who sort of does something really nasty, like they'll send an email saying 'this person didn't' do their job' or 'this person took a can of Coke from the fridge' and they'll blind copy in all of senior management. Then in the next minute they'll organise a gluten free cake for this person," he says.

3. The 'I'm just so sick, but I'm too important to go home' person.

Stanford says that such people worry that "the world with stop, there will be tumbleweeds rolling down the office corridor, the office will shut down," if they call in sick.

"They pride themselves on their work ethic but they cut the workforce participation by 20 per cent each year by leaving soggy tissues and coughing all over you," he said.

4. 'I know stuff before you do' person

According to Stanford, such people feed off misery, fear of job cuts, and love spreading bad news.

"They kind of love the idea that things aren't working out, they love problems. They definitely thrive on a bad situation; they love the fact that hey might know a little bite more than anyone else," he said.

5. The 'I, I ... I' person.

Stanford says that such people step in at the last minute to swoop in, and claim all the credit, leaving shocked co-workers in their wake. People who claim all the success and cleverly distance themselves from any failure.

6. 'Let's have a meeting before the meeting' person

The writer says that such persons thrive in big offices, where they can spend their days going to meetings instead of actually workin

-Yahoo




Everybody wants to ride with you in the Limo, but what you need it somebody who will take the bus with you when the Limo breaks down - Oprah Winfrey
0 members liked this post
 
#6 12-Sep, 2009 04:25 PM
Bobin
Best-seller
Joined Date: 05 Dec 2008
Location: Navi Mumbai
Posts: 778
Likes: 0

WHO maps world's deadliest roads

Thu, Sep 10 08:17 AM

Geneva, Sep 10 (DPA) The most dangerous place in the world to travel on roads is in the impoverished East African state of Eritrea, says the World Health Organisation (WHO) in its first report on global road safety.

To identify the most hazardous roads, WHO experts sifted through a mass of data which showed that around 1.3 million people are killed each year on the world's highways. A further 20 to 50 million people sustain non-fatal injuries.

The global record for road deaths per capita goes to the former Italian colony of Eritrea where figures showed an estimated 48 deaths per 100,000 people.

Road travel in the Cook islands in the South Pacific is nearly as dangerous too, with a statistical 45 deaths per 100,000. The archipelago north-east of New Zealand is home to just 13,325 citizens and five of them died in road accidents in 2007. Egypt (41.6) and Libya (40.5) also both had a poor road safety record.

Driving too fast, drinking and driving along with the failure to use seatbelts and talking on mobile phones while at the wheel were given in the report as key contributing factors to the high number of fatalities and accidents on roads around the world.

'These are stunning figures that need not, should not, be so high. Over 90 percent of these deaths occur in low-income and middle-income countries, which have less than half of the world's registered vehicles. This is another statistic that tells us something is wrong,' WHO Director General Margaret Chan said in a statement.

Chan said the report's findings would serve as a basis for discussion at the First Global Ministerial Conference on Road Safety, which is due to take place in Moscow in November 2009.

'This will be a milestone event in international road safety that will serve as a call to action to reduce the impact of road traffic crashes over the next decade,' said Chan.

The safest road conditions were found amid the islands and atolls which make up the Micronesian nation of the Marshall Islands. Here 59,000 residents have a mere 2,487 vehicles between them. Only one fatal road accident was recorded in 2007.

France and Germany suffered 7.5 and six fatalities per 100,000 respectively compared to Britain (5.4) and the US where more than 251 million vehicles are registered. The quota here was 13.9 fatalities per 100,000 people. A similar level could be found in Sri Lanka, Turkey and Azerbaijan.

Source-Yahoo




Everybody wants to ride with you in the Limo, but what you need it somebody who will take the bus with you when the Limo breaks down - Oprah Winfrey
0 members liked this post
 
#7 13-Sep, 2009 07:19 PM
Krishna
Moderator
Joined Date: 10 Jan 2009
Location: Noida
Posts: 3489
Likes: 7

MODS: Could you please correct "Ramdom" to "Random" in the thread title and delete this suggestion? Thanks.

Will change-problem with tools-MODS



Last Updated: 16-Sep, 2009 08:17 AM, by Binoy.Thomas
0 members liked this post
 
#8 15-Sep, 2009 05:48 PM
Bobin
Best-seller
Joined Date: 05 Dec 2008
Location: Navi Mumbai
Posts: 778
Likes: 0

Yeah deleted this theard nobody is posting anything here.Laughing




Everybody wants to ride with you in the Limo, but what you need it somebody who will take the bus with you when the Limo breaks down - Oprah Winfrey
0 members liked this post
 
#9 15-Sep, 2009 05:54 PM
Amit
Legend
Joined Date: 22 May 2009
Location: Pune
Posts: 1123
Likes: 1

No Bobin there is no need to delete the therad...this is good info u have put here ...I have gone through all plz keep them coming




Smile : A curve that can set a lot of things straight.
0 members liked this post
 
#10 24-Sep, 2009 12:13 PM
Bobin
Best-seller
Joined Date: 05 Dec 2008
Location: Navi Mumbai
Posts: 778
Likes: 0

ok  this 1 for u for saying not to delete this thread.

ISRO superstitious before rocket launch?

Wed, Sep 23 04:32 PM

Sriharikota (Andhra Pradesh), Sep 23 (IANS) Scientists at the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) do not just rely on scientific calculations before a rocket launch - they also seek divine help.

Prior to every launch, the scientists make a visit to Tirupathi to have a 'darshan' of Lord Balaji seeking his blessings by placing a replica of the rocket to be launched.

It seems the superstition extends to numbers as well.

After the 12th commercial launch of Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle termed PSLV-C12 from the spaceport here, ISRO has jumped one number and called its next rocket, that launched Oceansat-2 and six European nano satellites, as PSVL-C14.

Queried about the fate of PSLV-C13, a high ranking ISRO official told IANS: 'There is no such rocket designated with that number.'

He declined to comment when queried whether ISRO considered 13 an unlucky number.

Source: Yahoo




Everybody wants to ride with you in the Limo, but what you need it somebody who will take the bus with you when the Limo breaks down - Oprah Winfrey
0 members liked this post