Sunday, 23 April 2017

Say No To Foreign Breed Dogs. Why? Reason Is Here

Say no to foreign breed dogs.


Indian breed Dogs are skilled in hunting and guarding, can also be trained easily.In olden days especially in south India Most of these dogs are preferred and adopted by the Royal Families of the regions they belong to.
Nowadays Indian breed dogs are said to be street dogs, definitely it is not.

we encourage people to adopt our own dog breeds, specially Indian dog breeds can adapt themselves in any kind of climates,foods etc,.


1. chippiparai
One of the many sighthound breeds originating in India, this dog is bred by royal families in Chippiparai near Madurai district Tamil Nadu. Primarily used for hunting boar, deer and hare; it was later kept as a symbol of royalty and dignity.
This breed is an Indian guard dog developed in the Rajapalayam region in Tamil Nadu. It was believed that they were used to fight against British Cavalry in a few battles. The most prized look is the milky-white coat with pink nose, although the whiter mutations come with a higher chance of deafness as with all other white coat dog breeds. Lately, they are being used by the Indian army as guards along the Kashmir border.

3.kanni

Kanni is a rare indigenous breed of sighthound also bred in Tamil Nadu. They are closely related to the Chippiparai and are said to be descendants of the Saluki. These breeds were built to hunt deer as they are very agile and light on their feet. Usually a silent dog, they are great as guards of their owners and easy to train. However, they act independant when on a hunt as is their disposition. This is one of the rarest breeds on the list, almost on the verge of extinction. Due to the lack of proper specimen available, no proper effort has been taken to revive the Kanni breed. 

4.kombai or combai
Another hound from South India, the Kombai (Combai) was bred to hunt boar, bison and deer since as early as the 9th Century. In comparison with the Rajapalayam, the Kombai has a tan coat with usually a black muzzle. The jaws are wider and much stronger as well. In recent times, this breed is highly endangered and can be found in scarcity in a few regions and a couple of specialized kennels.



Indian breed dogs originate obviously in India and hence are comfortable in the changing climates. They are also low maintenance due to the same reason and fall less ill. Their immunity level is high according to the climate. Some foreign breed dogs cannot live without AC, and too much heat causes them ticks and fever which again results in high medical expenses on them. The Indian breed dogs can survive in any weather.
  • contact for the best price- 8248439837 (Madurai)Tamil Nadu

Friday, 21 April 2017

தாமிரபரணியில் தண்ணீர் எடுக்க தடை: நெல்லை கலெக்டர் அதிரடி

திருநெல்வேலி: மே 1ம் தேதி முதல் தாமிரபரணி ஆற்றில் இருந்து கோக், பெப்சி உள்ளிட்ட 8 தொழிற்சாலைகள் தண்ணீர் எடுக்க தடை விதித்து, நெல்லை கலெக்டர் கருணாகரன் உத்தரவிட்டுள்ளார்.
உத்தரவு:

தாமிரபரணியில் இருந்து குளிர்பான ஆலைகளுக்கு தண்ணீர் வழங்ககூடாது என மதுரை ஐகோர்ட் கடந்த 2016 நவம்பர் 21ல் உத்தரவிட்டது. அதன் பிறகு, 2017 மார்ச் முதல் வாரத்தில் ஐகோர்ட் மீண்டும் அந்த தடையை நீக்கி தண்ணீர் வழங்கலாம் என தெரிவித்தது. 

மே 1 முதல் தடை:

இந்நிலையில் அணைகளின் நீர்மட்டம் வேகமாக குறைந்து வருவதால், பொதுமக்களின் குடிநீர் தேவையை கருத்தில் கொண்டு வரும் மே 1 முதல் பெப்சி, கோக், மதுரா கோட்ஸின் 2 ஆலைகள், 3 காகித ஆலைகள், சிமெண்ட் ஆலை உட்பட 8 ஆலைகள் தாமிரபரணி ஆற்றில் தண்ணீர் எடுக்க தடை விதித்து மாவட்ட கலெக்டர் கருணாகரன் அதிரடி உத்தரவு பிறப்பித்துள்ளார்.

Funniest Things About Donald Trump

 America speaks. The funniest thing about Donald Trump is:
                                            
  Hair Hair Hair!!!
1. "This pic."
–@nightoatmeal
2. "The hair, obviously the hair."–@stevematic
3. "He looks like someone turned Conan O'Brien upside down."–@HombreDulceCA
4. "It's like that earwig thing from Wrath of Khan."–@vertov
5. "His commitment to overcomb any obstacle."–@SkyCorgan
6. "When he takes his wig off, he's Sepp Blatter."
–@willcusack
Ed. Note: Good catch.
7. "His hair is like cotton candy. If cotton candy were made of piss."–@JamesOpieLiving
8. "The uncanny similarity between this moth and his hair."
–@hkvibez
A great many people brought up the resemblance, which I believe was first noted by The Daily Mail, between Trump's iconic mane-over and the South American Flannel Moth caterpillar. It's maybe the best "separated at birth" ever. Worth noting, as well, about the Flannel Moth:
9. "Per Wikipedia, 'This is a very toxic caterpillar that you should never touch.'"
–@superguppy
10. (Retweeting the caterpillar pic): "Anyone else thinking Flock of Seagulls?"
–@randallwrites
11. "He bought a compass so his brush would correctly comb his hair forward."–@VaughanFamularo
12. (Retweeted the classic Time.com graphic "The Secret to Donald Trump's Hair.")
–@slonews
That Time.com graphic was really an outstanding piece of journalism. One hopes they consulted MIT physicists to check the feasibility of their design model.
13. "A tossup… between his hair and his thinking he has a chance of being elected President."–@tompainejr12
14. "The potential headlines & jabs: 'Trump: he can do to America what he did to Atlantic City!'"–@ringcycles
Recall this excerpt from Gawker about the closing of the Trump casino in AC. Trump's shoreline paradise makes Gary, Indiana, seem like Paris or The Hague:
"A few hours before its scheduled 6 a.m. Tuesday closing time, the Trump Plaza was even emptier than the night before.
'It's dead,' said Jessie, a 22-year-old parking attendant at the casino. 'You don't feel the warmth it used to have.'
Upstairs on the floor, employees gathered in the center near the gaming tables, hugged each other and chatted. A cocktail waitress used a napkin to wipe away tears as she carried a drink tray around to the slot machines, but only a few players remained at the slots. None that I saw ordered drinks.
Two men gambled at the one open blackjack table until the last minute. The house won both last hands with two straight blackjacks."
15. "That he derides poor people with 'If I can do it, you can,' while carefully avoiding the fact he was handed 10 million to start."–@greecebaII
Ed. Note: Trump's inheritance was actually a little bigger than that.
16. "He teaches seminars about how to be successful. Lesson #1: be Fred Trump's son."–@Josh1938
17. "How he claims to be a great businessman but has bankrupted like 10 different companies."–@big_bear_mn
The real number is four, according to most reports.
18. "I have to go with the investigators he sent to Hawaii. Are they still there?"–@randy_ratliffKC
Trump said at the time he sent his Mystery Machine crew to the islands, "I can't believe what they're finding." Not many others did, either, as it turned out.
19. "He's talking about ‪@Oprah as a running mate."
–@JeffreyGuterman
Trump dropped a number of bombshells yesterday, including this one: He announced he was thinking of adding the talk titan to the ticket. Oprah has yet to comment.
20. "His idea about building a wall of Mexico and charging them for it."–@heatherbelle585
The Great Wall was another outstanding plank of Trump's announcement speech. We can only hope it will be called the Great Wall of Trump.
21. "He thinks 'bigly' is a word."
–@RhythmRuler

5 Young Indian Entrepreneurs Under Age 25

 1.Name: King Siddharta


 Age: 22

Popular As: An Entrepreneur, Artist, Designer and Public Speaker


The Journey: King Siddharta was creative since childhood. At an early age of 11, he used to organize events at his locality. He identified with entreprenurship and the passion kept growing. During his 10th standard, he came up with the idea of an online magazine – Friendz that brought together like-minded people at one place. In no time, he developed interest in film making, and he pursued this hobby by shooting videos along with his friends. By the time he reached the 11th standard, he got well-acquainted with development and designing of websites. Presently, is an author, speaker and a magazine publisher, and organizes ‘Createens’ – a conference that aims at teaching young students about entrepreneurship and blogging. His e-magazine, Friendz is extremely popular among teens. Also, he has written a book, ‘Bhagvad Gita and The Law of attraction’ that explains the connection between science and spirituality. In the year 2010, he was listed among World’s Top 25 Young Entrepreneurs.
                                                         
 2.Name: Ritesh Agarwal

Age: 21

Popular As: Founder and CEO of OYO Rooms


The Journey: Ritesh is known to be one of the youngest CEO in the Indian hotel industry, besides, he is also the first resident Indian to be awarded with Thiel Fellowship. His dream of getting into the entrepreneurial world started at the tender age of 17. After his 12th standard, he enrolled in Indian School of Business and Finance, Delhi, but after a little while, he dropped out of the college to start his own venture. He formed Oravel Stays at the age of 18, which eventually led to the creation of OYO Rooms, the largest network of Indian branded hotels. Today, his business operates in more than 100 Indian cities and for the same, he has been presented numerous awards, one out of which is the ‘Business World Young Entrepreneur Award’. He is often seen attending various institutes and entrepreneurial conferences as a guest speaker.


3.Name: Arjun Rai

Age: 22

Popular As: COO of OdysseyAds
The Journey: When kids’ lives center around toys and mischiefs at 7, this boy started showcasing his entrepreneur skills. He started his garage sale, and started selling the gears that he found around his house. Later, he set up his shop where he sold wedding leftover wildflower necklaces. By 2010, he became the COO of an online advertising company, and later he set up his own venture, odysseyAds.





4.Name: Farrhad Acidwalla
  Age: 21

 Popular As: CEO of Rockstah Media
The Journey: At an early age of 16 years, he borrowed $10 from his father and bought an internet domain name. Using this, he built a web community dedicated to aero-modelling and aviation. Once it became successful, he sold the community for higher returns. Today, he is the CEO of Rockstah Media, an advertising, branding and marketing company. Also, he has been listed as ‘The Most promising young Indian entrepreneurs of 2012′ by India TV.


Name: Sabirul Islam



Age: 25
Popular As: Entrepreneur, motivational speaker, author

The Journey: He spent his early years in a crime-ridden borough of London. His cousin let him knew what entrepreneurship was all about, when at an early age of 13, he offered him a job. Few weeks later, Sabirul’s cousin was fired, and this was when he decided to run the operations all by himself. When he was all of 14, he along with 6 of his friends, started a website design company – Veyron Technology, and earned around $1000 within the first 2 weeks of the company’s inception. By the time he was 17, he published his first book, ‘The World at Your Feet’, which got sold out at a rapid pace. Next, he launched ‘Teen-Trepreneur’, a board game,started his own publishing company and now attends a number of events as an eminent guest speaker.

For some people a 9-to-5 job is satisfying, while some realize that the only way they can become happy is by being their own boss. However, true potential cannot be bound by age, and these young entrepreneurs have certainly proved the same.

Why the iPhone 7 is still better than the Samsung Galaxy S8

The first reviews for Samsung's new Galaxy S8 were universally positive, and deservedly so.
It really is a great phone . Excellent hardware. Beautiful design. Great camera, battery life, and overall performance.
But even though the iPhone 7 looks and feels outdated by comparison, it has one key advantage that gives it an edge over the Galaxy S8: the iOS ecosystem.
Just look at the reviews.
While everyone praised Samsung's hardware and design, it's clear that Samsung misfired on the software side of things. Bixby, Samsung's homegrown digital assistant, is basically useless and fails in its attempt to mimic Google's own Assistant. Plus, Samsung flubbed the Bixby launch and won't launch its voice controls until later this year. When that happens, Galaxy S8 owners will have two assistants living on their phone competing for their attention.
On top of that, Samsung made loads of unnecessary modifications to Android. There are duplicate Samsung-branded apps for everything from email to calendar, and none of them are better than the Google apps that ship with Android.
Plus, Samsung has a horrible track record of keeping its phones up to date. Even the Galaxy S7, which is barely a year old, isn't running the latest version of Android on some carriers. And it's been about six months since Google released that version of Android. Meanwhile, new Samsung-specific software features rarely make it to older phone models. If you buy a new Samsung phone, it only remains relevant for about a year until the next one comes out.
Apple does a much better job at keeping iPhones up to date for several years. It pushes the same version with the same features to practically every iPhone still in use. And it's that strength of the iOS ecosystem that keeps developers coming back and offering the latest and greatest apps and new features on iOS first.
It's true that Apple's lead in smartphones is thinning, and Samsung's innovative hardware and design in the Galaxy S8 is all the proof you need of that. But it's iOS that gives Apple the advantage.
This is why I think the Galaxy S8 (and likely the Note 8 that's expected to launch this fall) will struggle against Apple's next iPhone , which is said to adopt a lot of features from Samsung like that larger, curved screen.
Samsung will enjoy a nice glow following the launch of the Galaxy S8 for a few months, but Apple is poised to widen its lead again in the fall.

Thursday, 20 April 2017

Muslim teen reveals father's response to removing hijab

Fed up of people suggesting all Muslim women are ‘forced’ to wear hijabs,
 17-year-old Lamyaa asked her dad what he’d think if she stopped 
wearing it - and his response was everything.
Lamyaa, an Arab Muslim woman living in Pennsylvania, US,
 had received derogatory comments online about her faith and
 the fact she wore a hijab.
 One person even suggested that if she stopped wearing it, her
 father would “beat her”.
So, Lamyaa sent her dad a message telling him she was considering
 removing her hijab and later tweeted her father’s response,
 which countered the stereotype that all Muslim women are oppressed by men.
“People believe that Islam is misogynistic, hateful, or violent,
 and I think that stems from their inability to
 differentiate culture and religion,” Lamyaa later told Upworthy. 
“Islam is a religion and, like all religions, it is what you bring to it.”