Sunday, 29 December 2013
Saturday, 21 September 2013
Friday, 12 April 2013
This message is beyond all relationships.. ....:) When I'll be dead....., your tears will flow,.. But I won't know... Cry for me now instead ! you will send flowers,.. But I won't see... Send them now instead ! you'll say words of praise,.. But I won't hear.. Praise me now instead ! you'll forget my faults,.. But I won't know... Forget them now, instead ! you'll miss me then,... But I won't feel... Miss me now, instead you'll wish... you could have spent more time with me,... Spend it now instead !! Moral...... ''Spend time with a person you love the most , the one you care for. Make him/her feel special, for you never know when time will take themaway from you forever''!
Wednesday, 27 March 2013
For the longest time, when most companies produced a product, they were content with doing nothing about the waste leftover from the production process. Times have changed, though. Through genius innovation, many entrepreneurs have taken what was once useless sludge and transmuted it into massive profits.
10
Brewer’s Yeast Extract
After yielding their finished product, breweries in the late 19th century were left with thousands of pounds of excess yeast and frothy liquid leftover from the manufacturing process. It was common practice to dump it all down the drain, rendering it useless, but German scientist Justus Liebig desperately wanted to find a way to make it edible. Seeing the vast quantities of wasted product that he could attain for free, he accidentally discovered that the yeast could be concentrated, bottled, heavily salted, and then eaten. He called his product Marmite. It ended up being a massive success in countries like Sri Lanka and Britain, and it was a mainstay in the cost-efficient rations of soldiers inboth world wars. To this day, the company still manufactures over 24 million jars a year and is so popular that it has created a competitive market with other companies, such as Vegemite.
9
Isinglass
The human race has a rich history of getting hopelessly inebriated, and with the demand for fermented, smashed grapes also comes the demand for agents to remove the bits of yeast, bacteria, and proteins that pollute the finished product. This process is called clarification. For thousands of years, our ancestors used things like oyster shells, chalk, and earthenware during this process, and even went so far as to store the wine in the dried skins of dead animals. At the end of the 18th century, commercial brewing was going through a massive expansion which led to the innovation and widespread use of Isinglass, a collagen obtained from the dried swim bladders of fish. You’d think by now we’d have some sort of machine to streamline the clarification process, but it turns out the bladders of fish do the job better than anything we can synthesize. They accelerate the process of clumping the live yeast together into a jelly-like substance through an electro-static interaction between the positively charged collagen molecules and the negatively charged yeast cells, creating a tight bond between yeast and Isinglass. The result is a cleaner and clearer wine in a fraction of the time.
8
Coal Tar
When coal is carbonized to make high-carbon fuel or gasified to make coal gas, coal tar is produced as a byproduct. For a long time, uses for coal tar were sparse and exclusively industrial. It was mostly lit on fire and burned for its heat, if for no other reason than simply because it was flammable. In 1878, Constantin Fahlberg was part of a Johns Hopkins University study on coal tar where he experimented with a variety of different compounds throughout the day. One night, while eating bread at dinner, he noticed an incredibly sweet taste on his hand and instantly ran back to his laboratory and tasted all of the beakers he was working on that day. After several hours of searching, he found one in particular that was 300 times sweeter than sugar. Simply put, the world of zero-calorie artificial sweeteners was born. He named his creationSaccharin—a wildly popular alternative to sugar throughout the 20th century and the chief ingredient in Sweet N’ Low.
7
Cow Intestines
Cow intestines led a pretty depressing existence prior to the nineteenth century. Their taste was overshadowed by the rest of the delicious parts of the cow and their utility was overshadowed by the versatility of pig and sheep intestines for sausage casing. All of that ended in 1875 when Pierre Babolat made the first cow intestine tennis racket, citing its ability to absorb wrist strain and control the ball better. Typically, the 120-foot small intestine is extracted and cut into 40-foot strands that are then treated with chemicals to aid preservation. The strands are spun tightly together and dried out in a humid room for six weeks to prevent cracking. It takes nearly four whole intestines to make a single tennis racket, but even today it’s a commodity that’s cherished by some of the world’s best professional tennis players. Previously, cow farms would pay waste removal companies thousands of dollars each month to remove the leftover intestines, but now they’ve become one of the most profitable byproducts of the slaughtering process.
6
Pig Heart Valves
Throughout history, pig farmers rarely found much use at all for the pig’s heart. In fact, some internal organs had such little value, they would grind them up into a sludgy makeshift feedstock and feed it to pigs they would breed in the future. In 1968, the marginal success of experiments at the National Heart Hospital in London, England eventually led to the development of porcine heart valve replacement surgery. Today, there is an entire subculture of the pig farming community that breeds pigs exclusively for their heart valves and sells them to bioprosthesis companies. Nature Farm in Malta, Idaho, breeds over 200 sows a week, all meeting the strict specifications required by the porcine heart valve market. A typical heart valve will run consumers about $5,000 in the current market, and considering the typical American diet, pig hearts are probably better suited for us anyway.
5
Horse Urine
For as long as horses have bred and domesticated, their urine has seeped into the topsoil, smelled terrible, and killed vegetation. Things changed in 1942 when the FDA approved Premarin, a hormone replacement therapy that’s derived from the urine ofpregnant horses. It contains over 200 hormones that combine with modern medical advances to greatly reduce the effects of several ailments. Its use in hormone replacement therapy reduces hot flashes. Its estrogen is used to treat certain types of clinical depression. Its various hormones aid patients plagued by heart disease and osteoporosis, and it can even be used as a chief ingredient in fertility treatments. In just under sixty years, a yellow, alfalfa-smelling waste product has turned into a $2 billion industry that helps more than nine million people a year relieve symptoms of painful and annoying conditions.
4
Cow Hooves
During the life of a cow, hooves are a source of anguish for farmers because of their tendency to cause health problems and pain. In death, they used to be expensive to dispose of and relatively useless, but that changed in the mid 1900′s when it was discovered that their chief ingredient, keratin, could be added to fire extinguishers to aid in suppressing the high-heat, high-intensity fires triggered by aviation fuel. Keratin acts as a bonding agent to the foam bubbles that would typically break up upon contacting these remarkably hot fires, and the reinforced structure forms an oxygen-proof blanket that stifles the flames. Additionally, for the past decade or so, beauty companies have been selling ‘Brazilian Keratin Treatments’ that claim to use keratin to smooth and shine hair and ‘revitalize’ the outer layer of skin. Although some of the biggest players in the industry have moved to synthesized keratin, the majority of companies still get it from cow hooves, feathers, and sheep wool.
3
Vegetable Resin
When corn and potato farmers are done harvesting their crop, a crushed, tattered remnant of the original stalk remains, seemingly useless. When the biomass movement began in the late 20th century, farmers began to extract the starch from the leftover plants by blasting them with water and then letting the white-ish liquid dry in the sun for a few days. They then took the residual powder and processed it into a pellet they referred to as resin. This resin is used—often times in coalition with several other waste products—to produce a plethora of fully biodegradable bioplastic products, includingstarch-based packing peanuts. In fact, there is so much starch content in some of these bioplastics that the human body can actually digest them! A vibrant global marketplace now exists and is growing tremendously. Just one company from California namedCereplast tripled their earnings in one year—from $1.5 million to $5.4 million.
2
Urea
Urea, in short, is the component of urine by which the kidneys expel excess nitrogen from the body. For years it was (literally) pissed away, but in 1828, the German chemist Friedrich Wohler found a way to isolate urea from the urine by treating silver isocyanate with ammonium chloride. Despite this breakthrough, urea continued to be of little use until the 21st century. In response to consumer demand for teeth-whitening products with a long shelf life, companies that sold whitening toothpaste and teeth whitening strips began using urea mixed with hydrogen peroxide, a substance called carbamide peroxide. The urea is used to stabilize and extend the shelf life of the whitening agent. It is primarily found in clinical grade whiteners that are found at a dentist’s office, but one particularly well known product that uses it is Colgate Simply White.
1
Chicken Feet
Twenty years ago, not only were chicken feet almost completely useless, chicken farmers had to pay to get rid of them. Most of the time, they would end up as a filler in dog foods. In the 1990s, globalization became a more feasible reality for smaller companies aspiring for a transnational business model, and chicken farmers started profiting from the sale of chicken feet to China. Now, the U.S. exports about 300,000 metric tons of chicken feet a year. Just one company, Perdue Farms, produces over a billion chicken paws a year and brings in more than $40 million in revenue. The demand for chicken feet is so high, the farmers could breed twice as many chickens as they do now and still easily sell them to China, but they would have no way to sell all the other parts of the chicken in the United States. What was once a complete waste product is now the chief profit center for every chicken farmer in the United States. It is the consensus amongst the industry that without the global demand for chicken paws, most farms would be driven out of business.
Sopore massacre: ‘They didn’t shoot at me again, they thought I was dead’
By AFZAL SOFI
Sopore: When they heard screams and gun shots, no one suspected that Border Security Forces troopers were coming to kill them.
Mohammad Ramzan Beigh, then 17, and five others had hid themselves in a shop at Main Chowk, Sopore, when they became the victim of one of the bloodiest massacres of recent history of Kashmir.
On January 6 1993, BSF personnel found them in the shop and dragged them out before showering bullets on them.
But few second before the shooting, Ramzan attempted to run from the spot realizing that he was going to die either way. He, however, fell down only few meters away when his knee received a burst of bullets.
“They did not shoot at me again, perhaps they thought that I was dead,” Ramzan told Kashmir Reader, 20 years after the incident.
After some time, he said, the troopers threw the bodies of five persons, who were his neighbouring shopkeepers, into a shop and torched the whole building.
“Throwing me into the building also did not strike their mind. Perhaps I was lucky to survive,” said Ramzan.
Earlier on that day, militants attacked the BSF bunker in this Apple Town, killing two BSF men.
Immediately after the attack, a group of BSF personnel stationed in nearby State Bank of India building rushed out to fire indiscriminately on whosoever came into their way, killing 54 civilians and injuring scores others. They also fired on an SRTC bus killing 15 passengers on the board.
According to eyewitnesses, including Ramzan, BSF sprinkled paraffin on the buildings and torched around 250 shops and many other structures, inside which several shopkeepers were roasted alive.
“I was hiding inside my shop when I found the building on fire. I escaped from the rare door of the building. But there were few neighbouring shopkeepers who were burned alive, only their skeletons were retrieved later,” Mohammad Shafi, who owns a shop in town, told Kashmir Reader.
Meanwhile, Ramzan recalls that after the firing stopped and feeling himself safe, he moved a bit to see his leg hanging from the knee and bleeding profusely. He said he looked around for help, but there was no one.
“It was snowing that day and I put some snow into the wound which froze the blood to some extent. I was lying there up to 5 pm when somebody spotted me and removed me to a Srinagar hospital,” said Ramzan.
However, two months of medical treatment could not save him from amputation, “which was something I could not bear and will haunt me through rest of my life.”
Ramzan, now 37, did not see any hope in the life after that and decided to remain bachelor to avoid familial responsibilities.
“My life rests on crutches now. I have become a big burden on myself and don’t want to take extra onus of having wife and children in life. I can earn myself by working as tailor during remaining part of my life,” said Ramzan who lives with his parents.
The Sopore massacre, as it’s known, was widely condemned across the world which forced the then Governor Garish Saxena to set up an inquiry commission headed by Justice Amarjeet Choudary, the then sitting judge of Haryana and Punjab High Court.
In 2012, in response to an RTI application, it was revealed that Department of Law, Government of Jammu and Kashmir declined the existence of the enquiry commission after Amarjeet Choudary refused to come to Srinagar and could not prepare any report within the stipulated time.
“The state government is of the opinion that the purpose for which the commission has been set up has not been achieved and its continued existence is unnecessary and should therefore be wound up,” reads the RTI reply.
After declining its existence, the government did not order fresh inquiry commission but pushed the whole matter into oblivion.
According to Ramzan, BSF conducted court martial of the involved battalion and the survivors were summoned by BSF at Singpora, Baramulla camp for giving their accounts.
“We were called only once and they recorded our account. What happened after that nobody knows,” Ramzan added.
Mohammad Ramzan Beigh, then 17, and five others had hid themselves in a shop at Main Chowk, Sopore, when they became the victim of one of the bloodiest massacres of recent history of Kashmir.
On January 6 1993, BSF personnel found them in the shop and dragged them out before showering bullets on them.
But few second before the shooting, Ramzan attempted to run from the spot realizing that he was going to die either way. He, however, fell down only few meters away when his knee received a burst of bullets.
“They did not shoot at me again, perhaps they thought that I was dead,” Ramzan told Kashmir Reader, 20 years after the incident.
After some time, he said, the troopers threw the bodies of five persons, who were his neighbouring shopkeepers, into a shop and torched the whole building.
“Throwing me into the building also did not strike their mind. Perhaps I was lucky to survive,” said Ramzan.
Earlier on that day, militants attacked the BSF bunker in this Apple Town, killing two BSF men.
Immediately after the attack, a group of BSF personnel stationed in nearby State Bank of India building rushed out to fire indiscriminately on whosoever came into their way, killing 54 civilians and injuring scores others. They also fired on an SRTC bus killing 15 passengers on the board.
According to eyewitnesses, including Ramzan, BSF sprinkled paraffin on the buildings and torched around 250 shops and many other structures, inside which several shopkeepers were roasted alive.
“I was hiding inside my shop when I found the building on fire. I escaped from the rare door of the building. But there were few neighbouring shopkeepers who were burned alive, only their skeletons were retrieved later,” Mohammad Shafi, who owns a shop in town, told Kashmir Reader.
Meanwhile, Ramzan recalls that after the firing stopped and feeling himself safe, he moved a bit to see his leg hanging from the knee and bleeding profusely. He said he looked around for help, but there was no one.
“It was snowing that day and I put some snow into the wound which froze the blood to some extent. I was lying there up to 5 pm when somebody spotted me and removed me to a Srinagar hospital,” said Ramzan.
However, two months of medical treatment could not save him from amputation, “which was something I could not bear and will haunt me through rest of my life.”
Ramzan, now 37, did not see any hope in the life after that and decided to remain bachelor to avoid familial responsibilities.
“My life rests on crutches now. I have become a big burden on myself and don’t want to take extra onus of having wife and children in life. I can earn myself by working as tailor during remaining part of my life,” said Ramzan who lives with his parents.
The Sopore massacre, as it’s known, was widely condemned across the world which forced the then Governor Garish Saxena to set up an inquiry commission headed by Justice Amarjeet Choudary, the then sitting judge of Haryana and Punjab High Court.
In 2012, in response to an RTI application, it was revealed that Department of Law, Government of Jammu and Kashmir declined the existence of the enquiry commission after Amarjeet Choudary refused to come to Srinagar and could not prepare any report within the stipulated time.
“The state government is of the opinion that the purpose for which the commission has been set up has not been achieved and its continued existence is unnecessary and should therefore be wound up,” reads the RTI reply.
After declining its existence, the government did not order fresh inquiry commission but pushed the whole matter into oblivion.
According to Ramzan, BSF conducted court martial of the involved battalion and the survivors were summoned by BSF at Singpora, Baramulla camp for giving their accounts.
“We were called only once and they recorded our account. What happened after that nobody knows,” Ramzan added.
Friday, 1 March 2013
.: Afridi's Unmatchable Cricket Records & Feats
.: Afridi's Unmatchable Cricket Records & Feats: First a 5 wicket haul to destroy Gloucestershire and then a belligerent 29 off 17 and 3-10 to roll over Sussex and lead Hampshire to the...
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