Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Ever Wonder Why?!






Why a Jew can grow his beard in order to practice his faith



But when Muslim does the same, he is an extremist and terrorist!



Why a nun can be covered from head to toe in order to devote herself to God.



But when Muslimah does the same she oppressed.



When
a western women stays at home to look after her house and kids she is
respected because of sacrificing herself and doing good for the
household?




But when a Muslim woman does so by her will, they say, "she needs to be liberated"!



Any girl can go to university wearing what she wills and have her rights and freedom?



But when Muslimah wears a Hijab they prevent her from entering her university!



When a child dedicates himself to a subject he has potential.



But when he dedicates himself to Islam he is hopeless!



When
a Christian or a Jew kills someone religion is not mentioned, but when
Muslim is charged with a crime, it is Islam that goes to trial!




When someone drives a perfect car in a bad way no one blames the car.



But when any Muslim makes a mistake or treats people in a bad manner - people say "Islam is the reason"!



When someone sacrfices himself to keep others alive, he is noble and all respect him.



But
when a Palestinian does that to save his son from being killed, his
brother's arm being broken, his mother being raped, his home being
destroyed, and his mosque being violated -- He gets the title of a
terrorist! Why? Because he is a Muslim!




When there is a trouble we accept any solution? If the solution lies in Islam, we refuse to take a look at it.



Without looking to the tradition of Islam, people believe what the newspapers say.



But question what the Quran says!

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Us ke bina ab chup rahna acha lagta hai






Us ke bina ab chup rahna acha lagta hai
khamoshi se dard ko sehna acha lagta hai,

Jis hasti ki yad mein aanso baraste hain
Samnay us kay kuch na kehna acha lagta hai,

Mil kar us se bichar na jaon darta hoon
isi liay bas door hi rehna acha lagta hai,

Janta hoon kay chahat mein bas aansoo miltay hain
khuch bi ho ab is zeher ko peena acha lagta hai,

Je karta hai sari khushian usi kay daaman mein daal doon
Us kay pyar mein sab khuch khona acha lagta hai..

Saturday, March 7, 2009

Colourful Flights








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Military Aircrafts in US








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The Devils Swimming Pool







In Zimbabwe, Africa, you will find the magnificent Victoria Falls, at a height of 128m.


The location is known as the “Devil’s Swimming Pool”. During the
months of September and December, people can swim as close as possible
to the edge of the falls without falling over.


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Sunday, February 22, 2009

Zamane beet jatay hain


Kabi nazrein milane mein zamanay beet jatay hain



Kabi nazrein churane mein zamanay beet jatay hain







kisi ne kholi ankh to soonay ki nagri mein



kisi ko gher bananay mein zamanay beet jatay hain







Kabi kali siyah ratain ik pal si lagti hain



kabi ik pal bitanay mein zamanay beet jatay hain







kabi khula ghar ka darwaza tu samnay thi manzil



kabi  manzil kay aanay mein zamanay beet jatay hain







ik pal mein toot jatay hain umer bhar kay rishtay



jinhay banany mein zamanay beet jatay hain







Wednesday, December 10, 2008

What the Search Engines Have Found Out About All of Us

Google has released its map of the national brain and appetites for 2008, and it turns out that many, many people across America have been asking the Internet “what is love?” and “how to kiss.”

And to tighten the focus, Google has also provided a list of search queries made by people sitting at computers in New York City.

It turns out that New Yorkers are looking for something a bit different. On a list of the 10 subjects that posted the greatest increases this year, the country as a whole was looking for Fox News and information about David Cook, the “American Idol” champion.

Neither made the New York list. Then again, the national list did not have 2 of the city’s top 10: Walter Gropius, the founder of the Bauhaus architecture school, and the Large Hadron Collider, a 17-mile circular underground tunnel in Switzerland that was built to smash protons into each other at the speed of light.

No doubt someone out in cyberspace can explain the surge of interest this year in Gropius, who has been dead since 1969 and has only one structure of any note in the city, the former Pan Am building.

The collider is easier to understand. There were worries that the crash of protons would instantly create a black hole, but in good news that was widely overlooked at the time, no hole appeared — or is it disappeared? — on Sept. 10, the day the machine was turned on. Search-engine interest in the collider promptly dropped off, as people pointed their anxieties and inquiries toward “Wall Street.” (The collider is currently on the fritz, as is Wall Street.)

On the surface, these kinds of lists are supposed to reveal what Google calls the zeitgeist of 2008, though it’s not much of a surprise that people were interested in Sarah Palin and Barack Obama. But they also provide hints of the level of personal details that people are now turning over to search engines and related businesses without much awareness.

The lists, said Lt. Col. Greg Conti, a professor of computer science at West Point, “are just major tsunami-type activities, big waves in the online searches.”

Professor Conti, the author of “Googling Security: How Much Does Google Know About You?” (Addison-Wesley, 2008), contends that Google’s internal tools make it possible to develop detailed pictures of individual interests, not just of masses of teenagers looking for the very latest about Miley Cyrus.

“A complete picture of us as individuals and as companies emerges — political leanings, medical conditions, business acquisitions signaled by job searches,” he said. “It would be very scary if we could play back every search we made. Those can be tied back very precisely to an individual. You can go all the way from individual molecules of water up to the tsunami.”

INFORMATION on the Web looks free, but it is actually swapped for little bits of data that are useful to businesses. Google records Internet protocol addresses that are generated by each computer, cookies permitted by the users, the kind of browser being used, and the operating system of the computer, said Heather Spain, a spokeswoman for Google.

After nine months, Ms. Spain said, Google “anonymises” the data it has collected.

“At that point we permanently delete the last two digits from both the I.P. address and parts of the cookie numbers,” she said. “This breaks the link between the search query and the computer it was entered from. It’s similar to the way in which credit card companies replace digits with hash marks on receipts to improve their customers’ security.”

Professor Conti said that few people have the slightest idea how much of a trail they leave across the Internet. “People tend to think they’re only leaving footprints on sites that they trust,” he said, but many Web sites contain invisible code, like Google Analytics, that can track users over swaths of the Web.

The lists of popular searches, Ms. Spain said, are the products of inquiries by millions of people and do not threaten anyone’s privacy. The tools Google provides to the public for analyzing searches generally make it possible to look at the inquiries made in a particular state, not by individual cities.

For now, surrendering personal information is the cost for asking questions and getting answers quickly. All of the privacy measures are cumbersome.

“I speak about this at hacker conferences,” Professor Conti said, “and if they say something’s hard to use, believe me, it’s hard. There’s really no solution now — except abstinence. And if you choose not to use online tools, you’re not a member of the 21st century.”