Wednesday, June 1, 2011

how to successful blogger


Become a Blogger or Become Famous

As a blogger myself, I have noticed that many people have started picking up blogging as a profession and are trying to use their talent to gain popularity. Recently, someone shared a spectacular road-map illustration on how to gain fame through blogging. This illustration was shared by Dave Walker from We Blog Cartoons and I found the illustration quite funny.
famous-blogger
dinesh veera

photo shop short cut


TOOL
tools
1. Caps Lock switches your cursor to Plus sign for precision, while working with painting or editing tools.
2. To draw a straight line, click where you want the line to start, then go to the point where you want the line to end, hold Shift and Click.
3. Holding Ctrl will change you current tool to Move Tool, temporarily.
4. Holding Spacebar will change you current tool to Hand Tool, temporarily.
5. Holding Alt will change you current tool to Eyedropper Tool, temporarily if you are working with a painting tool.
6. Ctrl + Alt + Click and drag the image, it will create a duplication of the current image image or selection and make an overlay on top.
7. If you hold down Alt while using Burn or Dodge Tool, it switches the tool functions in between them.
8. When you are done typing with any text tool, press Ctrl+Enter, Photoshop will understand you are done.
9. Alt + Mouse Scroll changes the zoom level
10. While using Magnetic Lasso Tool, pressing Delete button will remove the previous anchor point.
11. While working with Zoom ToolCtrl + Spacebar = zooms in, Alt + Spacebar = zooms out.
12. Eyedropper Tool to captures foreground color, hold Alt and click, it will capture the color for background.
13. When drawing a line with Measure Tool, if you hold Alt and draw another line from the end of the first line, it will also measure the angle.
14. When using Marquee Toolshold down Alt and it will make the click point as the center point of the selection.When using Brush Tool, or other Paint Tools, pressing the numbers on the numeral pad will alter the transparency. ([4=40%] or [press 4 then 5 will get 45%])
15. Hold Shift and press “+” or “-” it will change the layer and painting modes:
    • N = Normal
    • I = Dissolve
    • M = Multiply
    • S = Screen
    • O = Overlay
    • F = Soft Light
    • H = Hard Light
    • D = Color Dodge
    • B = Color Burn
    • K = Darken
    • G = Lighten
    • E = Difference
    • X = Exclusion
    • U = Hue
    • T = Saturation
    • C = Color
    • Y = Luminosity
    • Q = Behind 1
    • L = Threshold 2
    • R = Clear 3
    • W = Shadow 4
    • V = Midtones 4
    • Z = Highlights 4
    • (This will work with these tools: Alpha turned off, Indexed Mode, Line tool, Bucket Tools, Dodge and Burn)

Workspace

workspace
16. When you double click the gray background area,  the “Open” command will run. (Works when no file is opened)
17. Double clicking on the title of any panel will minimize or maximize it.
18. All “Cancel” buttons in every Photoshop windows and tables, will be transformed into a “Reset” button by just holding Alt.
19. Pressing Tab will hide toolbar and panels, while Shift + Tab will only hide panels. This is one the most used trick in Photoshop.
20. Let’s have some fun, wanna change the grey background color outside the opened file, selectPaint Bucket tool, hold shift and click. Voila! (works only when a file is opened)
21. Open a file and press F button, it switches among the 3 different screen modes so you can easily choose the best workspace for your current task.
22. Ctrl + Backspace and Alt + Backspace will fill in the whole image area with foreground color or background colors.
23. Pressing Shift + Backspace will pop-up the option window, Alt + Shift + Backspace and Ctrl + Shift + Backspace, will fill the image with foreground or background color but will not change the values in of the areas of alpha.
24. Ctrl+J makes a duplicate layer.
25. Ctrl + D to deselect everything, and Ctrl+Shift+D to reselect what you deselected.
26. You can show or hide a path by pressing Ctrl+shift+H



27. Pressing Ctrl+Tab allows you to toggles between opened image files.
28. Alt drag a step from a serial action can copy it to another action.
29. If you want to import an object from Illustrator to Photoshop, just Copy and Paste. Photoshop will ask you whether to import it as a vector or bitmap.
30. Double clicking the Hand Tool will provide you the largest full image preview possible.
31. Double clicking the Zoom Tool sets the zoom level to 100%.
32. Pressing X will swap the foreground and background colors.
33. Pressing D will resets the foreground and background colors to default (mostly Black and White)
34. Ctrl+Shift+N opens the new layer with a dialog box, Ctrl+Shift+Alt+N creates a new layer, no questions asked.
35. Ctrl+E Merges Layers

Tuesday, May 31, 2011

jaisalmer fort


Jaisalmer Fort or Sonar Qila is one of the largest forts in the world. Built in 1156 AD by Bhati ruler Rawal Jaisal it stands high and mighty amid the golden sands of the Thar Desert on Trikuta Hill, which has been the sight of many battles. It’s massive yellow sandstone walls are a tawny color in the day, and fades to honey-gold when the sun sets, camouflaging the fort completely among the sands of the desert.
Story goes that Rawal Jaisal built it on the behest of a hermit named Eesaal. The site of Trikuta hill chosen as his earlier capital Luderwa, 16 km was exposed.
This is also the second oldest fort in Rajasthan. It is 250 feet tall and is reinforced by imposing crenellated sandstone wall 30 feet high. It has 99 bastions, 92 were built between 1633 and 1647. The wells dug during that period still provide a regular source of water. Even today, one fourth of the city’s population resides within the fort.
Throughout you will find the subtle combination of Rajput and Islamic architectural styles. The stone work is so elaborately and delicately carved, it is hard to believe that it is actually stone, not wood. Worth checking is the Ganesh Pol, Suraj Pol, Hawa Pol and Akshya Pol.
Jaisalmer Fort
Jaisalmer Fort, Rajasthan
During the medieval times, the city was the center point of trade routes that connected Persia, Arabia, Egypt and Africa. The fort has three layers of walls. The outer or the lower most layer is made of solid stone blocks this reinforces the loose rubble of the Trikuta Hill. The second, or middle, wall goes around the fort. The innermost, or the third, wall was the defensive wall where the Rajput warriors once hurled boiling oil and water and massive rocks at their enemies, trapping them between the second and third walls.
Ala-ud-din Khilji captured the fort in the 13th century and held it for 9 years. It was during this attack that women in the fort committed Jauhar. The second battle took place in 1541, when Humayun attacked the fort city.
The city faced recession when the major trade routes were shut and sea trade took priority. And after independence the trade routes were completely shut. But its location of being directly between India and Pakistan resulted in it seeing battle in 1965 and 1971.
Today only a quarter of the population stays within the fort in the past the entire population lived within its walls. People have built homes at the foot of the Trikuta Hills. Since a few years Jaisalmer has been on the watch list of the monuments facing degradation. It was included in the 1996 World Monuments Watch by the World Monuments Fund, and again in 1998 and 2000. Major restoration has taken place and yet a lot more is required if this glorious piece of history has to be saved from the very people that live within its walls.
Conservation urgently required
It is shambles due to poor maintenance by the authorities. Leakage of water due to poor drainage and sewage system is posing a massive threat to the foundation of the fort. The retaining wall of the fort is taking a lot of pressure and may give way. Archeological Survey of India started a technical study about renovating. A provision of Rs 10 crore has been made under Rajasthan Urban Infrastructure Development Project (RUIDP) for a new water supply and sewage system.
Faulty drainage and sewage system is leading to erosion of the soil and poses a threat to the fort foundation. A team has conducted soil tests and gathered geological data to save the foundation. A team of experts will try to stabilize the soil which is eroding from within the mountain, on which the fort is constructed.
The retaining wall of the fort comes under the jurisdiction of ASI whereas the internal area is under Municipal Corporation. The ASI is repairing the wall, which is broken at several points due to leakage. But there is no controlling the unplanned and illegal growth of buildings etc coming up within the fort which is affecting the original fort looks. The 865 years old fort is being weakened when the civic authorities are avoiding looking at new construction that gets sanctioned in the fort.
 
A team of ASI is also exploring the possibility of developing a modern sewerage system near Sonar Qila to provide stability to the fort.
Already the work on streamlining the sewage system is taking place while they are also thinking of replacing the telephone and electrical cables with underground ones.
A 5.3 magnitude earthquake at Mokla near Indo-Pak border gave a massive blow to the Jaisalmer Fort. The walls of the fort were damaged and raised serious concerns over the future of this marvel.
There is a huge depression in the fort near the Dhoonda Pada region. The soil of the mountain on which the fort stands is eroding. The soil being 154 lakh years old the seepage, the new construction is increasing the load on the soil which is shifting and can be dangerous to the fort.
Wall collapses become common site and although it has survived quakes of 5. And 7.7 on the Richter scale it may not survive another one. 16 of the 99 bastions are completely damaged. An earthquake of larger magnitude will see a tragedy on a very large scale.
Best is to limit the access to the fort – in new building activities, people residing within and tourists staying within. Places like America even conserve soil that is millions of years old, so why can’t we do it – in turn it will save a marvelous heritage – the Sonar Qila, its soil that 156 lakh years old and the hills that are even older. 
Facts
World Monument Watch (WMW) Sonar Qila at Jaisalmer has been on its list from 1996 till 2000.
Earlier a favourite among tourists now only back packers visit.
Nearly Rs 8 crore has been sanctioned by the Rajasthan Urban Infrastructure Development Project (RUIDP), and Rs 6 crore is pending since 2002 from a WMF grant to save this 857-year-old golden sandstone fort.
Rampant encroachment, numerous illegal constructions, a faulty sewerage system combined with the rising pressure of population residing in the fort, is making the fort vulnerable.
20 years ago, the fort was untouched by tourism. Rising population and tourists have led to increased demand for water supply without proper drainage facilities. Sewage is dumped in the streets and is seeping into the foundations.
Of the 469 historic buildings, 87 have collapsed and many are in poor condition.  August 1999 saw six inches of rain in 48 hours that led to the collapse of three of the 99 bastions.
dinesh veera, jaisalmer

Thursday, March 3, 2011

Google

Google


Can’t Find The G-Spot? You’re Not Alone: The Science of Sex

As much as I am inspired and impressed by modern medical and scientific advancements—nanotechnology, laparoscopic surgery, and genome sequencing to name a few—I’m also a bit shocked by the fact that we haven’t yet mastered some of the basics. Take human anatomy for instance. Yes, we’ve identified the twenty-six bones of the foot and the ventricles of the brain, but when it comes to deciphering the female urogenital tract, scientists are still at the drawing board. In fact, they have the same questions you might—does the G-spot exist, and if so, where the heck is it? Do women really have a prostate, and if so, can they ejaculate?

The Hotly Debated G-Spot
The G-spot, named after the gynecologist Ernest Gräfenberg, is an alleged erogenous zone located a few centimeters inside the vagina on the anterior wall. Its rise to popularity is usually attributed to the 1982 book, The G Spot and Other Recent Discoveries About Human Sexuality, co-authored by Beverley Whipple, a professor at Rutgers. Though the book describes how to find and stimulate this region, and sent intrepid women to try to locate theirs, it also gave the yet-to-be-classified area an almost mythical status—many have heard of it, and can generally describe what it’s supposed to do, but the majority haven’t actually seen its effects. Currently, there is no recognized part of the female anatomy labeled as the “G-spot.” In fact, researchers debate as to whether it exists at all.

Part of the problem stems from the general lack of research into women’s sexual health, which has hampered the ability to make anatomic generalizations. A review published in the American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology in 2001 states “the evidence is far too weak to support the reality of the G-spot” and that “anecdotal observations and case studies based on a small number of subjects are not supported by anatomic and biochemical studies.”

Skeptics of the G-spot also contend there is no neural pathway to signify a physiologic mechanism. A study published in the Journal of Sexual Medicine in 2006 took 101 vagina biopsy samples from twenty-one women and found that although nerves were located regularly throughout the vagina, there is no one location that has more nerve density than others, dispelling the notion of a single erogenous zone inside the vagina

Can’t Find The G-Spot? You’re Not Alone: The Science of Sex


Recent research, however, indicates variation rather than absence. A study done in 2008 by Emmanuele Jannini and colleagues at the University of L’Aquila in Italy used ultrasound to measure anatomical differences between women who report vaginal orgasms (orgasm due to stimulation of the vaginal walls and not the clitoris) and those who don’t. The researchers scanned the genital area of nine women who reported vaginal orgasms and eleven who didn’t and found that those with orgasms have thicker tissue in the “urethrovaginal space.” The authors conclude that the size of this space is correlated with the ability to have a vaginally-activated orgasm; without evidence of what they call the G-spot, women won’t have this type of orgasm.

However, critics on both sides of the debate question the results of this small study. G-spot detractors contend that this place could just be an extension of the clitoris, which was found in 1998 by Helen O’Connell to be much larger than previously thought—the part we can see externally is really just the tip of the iceberg. Because the clitoris extends all the way into the vagina, perhaps vaginal orgasms occur because they are actually stimulating the part of the clitoris, or the glands, nerves, and tissue surrounding this area.

On the other side of the debate are the G-spot believers who question why the study showed only some women to have G-spots and not all.

Prostate and Ejaculation, for Women?
Part of the confusion regarding the G-spot may also have to do with the unclear characterization of female “ejaculation” and the Skene’s glands. The Skene’s glands are paraurethral glands thought to be homologous to the male prostate, and are sometimes referred to as the female prostate.

Some researchers claim that the Skene’s glands and the G-spot work in conjunction—or perhaps are one in the same. According to the Kinsey Institute, during sexual arousal, the vagina and the Skene’s glands swell so that you can feel them in the interior of the vagina—around the same area that the G spot is supposed to be. For some women, pressure here is pleasurable; for others it is not.

Stimulation of this area in some women can cause the Skene’s glands to produce fluid, like its homologous male counterpart. In men, the prostate produces secretions, which mix with sperm to produce semen. In some women, the Skene’s glands may produce the fluid that is the source of female ejaculate. Although it comes out the urethra, the ejaculate is not urine. Biochemical analysis shows the presence of prostatic acid phosphatase and prostate specific antigen, further indicating the role of a prostate-like structure in women.

Can’t Find The G-Spot? You’re Not Alone: The Science of Sex

However, it is estimated that only about 10 percent of women experience ejaculation, so it is unclear how the glands function—or whether they exist in significant size—in all women. Most think they are a remnant of the embryonic stage, when we had the ability to be either sex. Males went on to have a penis and a prostate, while females developed a clitoris and in some, the Skene’s gland, or female prostate.

Just for Fun
Whether you want to refer to the anterior wall of the vagina as the G-spot, the clitoral urethrovaginal complex, or the female prostate, it is clear that some women derive pleasure from stimulating this area and some don’t. Unfortunately, anatomical differences are often interpreted, by the pharmaceutical industry and others looking to make a buck, as dysfunctions. Already there are G-spot “parties,” where women inject collagen into their vagina supposedly to make this region larger and enhance their sexual function. Drug companies are eager to find a female equivalent of blockbuster drugs like Viagra, and part of marketing a drug means creating the apparent need for it.

While exploring this area might be fun, there’s no need to get hung up on the idea that it isn’t producing explosive orgasms. In fact, studies indicate that 70 to 75 percent of women don’t orgasm through vaginal intercourse. Even those that contend every woman has a G-spot, like Beverly Whipple, aren’t trying to point to it as the crème de la crème of orgasm; rather, it seems they are trying to explain the experiences and physiology of women who do ejaculate and derive pleasure from stimulation in this region.

Long Time Coming
All the anatomical and physiology debate is ultimately good because it means more research into women’s sexual health. Scientists continue to redefine textbooks and hypotheses, trying to figure out the form and function of the female erogenous areas as accurately as possible. What they can agree on so far is that the female genitalia, like her arousal, is certainly more complex and diverse than previously


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Saturday, February 12, 2011

some interesting shortcut of computer


These days are very interested to use shortcut keys & some newbies asked me to list it, but now I’m back to college, so i listed out the top 21 & we will blog the whole shortcut keys list later. Now let us see the top 21 desktop shortcut keys
  1. Windows key + E = Explorer
  2. Windows key + Break = System properties
  3. Windows key + F = Search
  4. Windows key + D = Hide/Display all windows
  5. ALT + Tab = Switch between windows
  6. ALT, Space, X = Maximize window
  7. CTRL + Shift + Esc = Task Manager
  8. CTRL + C = Copy
  9. CTRL + X = Cut
  10. CTRL + V = Paste
  11. CTRL + Z   = Undo an action
  12. CTRL + Y  = Redo an action
  13. CTRL + A  =Select all items in a document or window
  14. F1 = Display Help
  15. F2 = Rename the selected item
  16. F3 = Search for a file or folder
  17. F4 = Display the Address bar list in Windows Explorer
  18. F5 = Refresh the active window
  19. F6 = Cycle through screen elements in a window or on the desktop
  20. F10 = Activate the menu bar in the active program

Sunday, January 30, 2011

mumbai theaters


Theatres in Mumbai



 Auditoriums, Theatres & Cinemas  in Mumbai

Diamond theatre, Gorai Rd, MUMBAI- Telephone: 8018116

Gaiety Galaxy  theatres,  Bandra, MUMBAI- Telephone: 6426963

Central plaza , MUMBAI- Telephone: 3821277

Imperial cinema, MUMBAI- Telephone: 3821623

Indian National theatre, MUMBAI- Telephone: 2650361

Kalpana theatre, MUMBAI- Telephone: 5145358

Homi Bhabha Auditorium- Nariman Point, MUMBAI- Telephone:  2152971

New Vijay cinema-Chembur, MUMBAI- Telephone: 5221284

Metro theatre- MUMBAI- Telephone: 2030303

Sterling theatre-V.T, MUMBAI- Telephone: 2075187

Dream land theatre , MUMBAI- Telephone: PH 3822066
Akash Talkies, Kurla ( W ) , MUMBAI- Telephone:  6506312

Geeta theater-Worli  naka, MUMBAI- Telephone: 4924188

Bharat Mata Theatre, MUMBAI- Telephone: 4150673

Liberty - Marine lines, MUMBAI- Telephone: 2031196

Central cinema, Girgaum, MUMBAI- Telephone: 3829607

Sunderabai hall, New Marine Lines, MUMBAI- Telephone: 2034275


Cama Hall-Shahid Bhagat Singh Rd, Colaba, MUMBAI- Telephone: 2057261


Vijay theatre, MUMBAI- Telephone:  5221348

New Empire - V.T, MUMBAI- Telephone: 2071286

Bhulabhai Desai auditorium-  MUMBAI- Telephone: 2020113


Plaza Theatre , MUMBAI- Telephone: 4305704

Regal Theatre - Colaba, MUMBAI- Telephone: 2031017

Patkar Hall , N Thackersey Road , MUMBAI- Telephone: 2034031


Prithvi theatre, Juhu Church Road , MUMBAI- Telephone:  624593


Rang Bhavan, Dhobi Talao , MUMBAI- Telephone:  2614460


Jaihind College hall, Churchgate, MUMBAI- Telephone: 2040256


Tarabai hall, Marine Lines, MUMBAI- Telephone:  2033359


Tejpal auditorium , Gowalia Tank, , MUMBAI- Telephone: 2072061


Theosophical hall, new Marine Lines , MUMBAI- Telephone:  2039024

K C College hall, Churchgate , MUMBAI- Telephone:  222272


Ravindra Natya mandir , Prabhadevi , MUMBAI- Telephone:  4223249


Shanmukananda hall, MUMBAI- Telephone:  483978


Natraj  Theatre-  Chembur, MUMBAI- Telephone: 5552860

New City Light cinema-Mahim, MUMBAI- Telephone: 4440775

Birla Matushri sabhagar -Marine Lines , MUMBAI- Telephone:  2036707


St Xavier's college Hall, Mahapalika Marg, , MUMBAI- Telephone:  2620661


Dinesh veera