Everything posted by -Sethu
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Musician Name: Muhammed Rafi Birthday / Location: 24|12|1924 / British India Main instrument: Vocal and Harmonium Musician Picture : Musician Awards & Nominations: Padma Shri Best Performance: Baharon Phool Barsao,Yeh Reshmi Zulfein and Jhilmil Sitaron Ka Aangan Hoga Other Information:
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Artist:Mohammed Rafi Real Name:Mohammed Rafi Birth Date /Place: 24|12|1924 / British India Age: 31 July 1980 (aged 55) Social status (Single / Married): Married Artist Picture: Musical Genres: Filmi Bhajans Ghazals Qawwali Shabad, Na'at, Classical ,Nazrul Geeti , Comedy Music Awards: Padma Shri Top 3 Songs (Names): Baharon Phool Barsao,Yeh Reshmi Zulfein and Jhilmil Sitaron Ka Aangan Hoga Other Information: He recorded songs for over a thousand Hindi films and in many Indian languages as well as some foreign languages, though primarily in Urdu and Punjabi, over which he had a strong command. He recorded as many as 7,000 songs throughout his career, spanning several languages and dialects such as Konkani, Assamese, Bhojpuri, Odia, Bengali, Marathi, Sindhi, Kannada, Gujarati, Tamil, Telugu, Magahi, Maithili, etc. Apart from Indian languages, he also sang in some foreign languages, including English, Farsi, Arabic, Sinhala, Mauritian Creole, and Dutch.
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Sure people learn from their mistakes though you make some mistakes you will have to work a bit on it other than that a pro from me.
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Nick Movie: The Whale Time: | 11| 2022 Netflix / Amazon / HBO?: - Duration of the movie:/ Trailer:
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where is the chat gone please check some one
GFX designer help me i am unable to keep any of you full photo
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Artist:Sonu Nigam Real Name: Sonu Nigam Birth Date /Place: 30 July 1973 Age: 49 Social status (Single / Married): Married Artist Picture: Musical Genres: Classical, pop, Rock ,Ghazal and devotional Awards: Zee Cine awards, Champions of Change and Padma Shri Top 3 Songs (Names): Abhi Mujh Mein Kahin, Suraj Hua Maddham and Sandese Aate Hai Other Information: Sonu Nigam (born 30 July 1973) is an Indian singer, music director and actor.He has been described in the media as one of the most po[CENSORED]r and successful playback singers of Hindi Cinema and Kannada Cinema. He has been honoured by the Government of India with Padma Shri, the country's fourth-highest civilian honour for his contribution in the field of arts.He was also a judge of X factor in 2011.
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Musician Name: Sonu Nigam Birthday / Location: 30 July 1973 Main instrument: Vocals Musician Picture: Musician Awards & Nominations: Zee cine awards, Champions of the change and padhma shri Best Performance: Abhi Mujh Mein Kahin,Suraj Hua Maddham and Sandese Aate Hai Other Information: /
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Music Title:FREZZ-SOONN Signer: Bilal Shaikh Release Date: 25|09|2014 Official Youtube Link: Informations About The Signer: / Your Opinion About The Track (Music Video): 08/10
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¤ Your name: <HUNT3R> ¤ Name of the administrator who abused: No Mercy ¤ Reason for report: Misuse of Power (He made HImself assasin when other players have more than 150 ammos ) and wont reply to a question ¤ Date/Time: 07-11-22 | 20 : 25 p.m ¤ Proof: 1 - 2
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Big pro we must bring this system of giving them weekly review of their activities which would also create a awareness to everyone about how their activities are going recent days
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It's possible that during the Triassic period, the crocodile-like phytosaur snapped at a frog-like creature, but missed. It's a good thing it did, because 216 million years later, paleontologists have found the fossils of these tiny creatures, the oldest known frog relative from North America, a new study finds. This frog — nicknamed the Chinle frog because it was found in the Chinle Formation of northern Arizona — is a big finding, but the creature itself was small, just over 0.5 inches (1.3 centimeters) long. "The Chinle frog could fit on the end of your finger," study lead researcher Michelle Stocker, an assistant professor of geosciences at Virginia Tech, said in a statement. [40 Freaky Frog Photos] The frog fossils were found next to the fossils of the crocodile-like phytosaur and those of early dinosaurs, the researchers said. The scientists, however, didn't find entire frog skeletons, but rather a few fragmented ilium, or hip bones, from several of these ancient frogs during an excavation in May 2018. But they hope to find more of the frogs' fossils soon, which is why they haven't given the creature a scientific name yet. They are still sifting through the dirt and rock excavated at the site, where they expect to find more skull and skeletal material from the frogs — findings they say will be more informative about the identity of this kind of creature, Stocker said. The team noted that while Chinle specimens are distant relatives of frogs, they are not the direct ancestor of modern frogs. But they're still salientians — a group that includes living frogs and their closely related, extinct relatives. In fact, the Chinle frog is the oldest known salientian from near the equator, the researchers noted. That's because during the Triassic period, when these frog-like animals lived, Arizona wasn't where it is today. Instead, the Grand Canyon state was once part of the supercontinent Pangaea and was located about 10 degrees north of the equator, the researchers said. An analysis of the frogs' hip bones shows that the species shares more features with modern frogs and Prosalirus, an early Jurassic frog discovered in the present-day Navajo Nation, than it does with Triadobatrachus, an early Triassic frog found in modern-day Madagascar. "These are the oldest frogs from near the equator," Stocker said. "The oldest frogs overall are roughly 250 million years old from Madagascar and Poland, but those specimens are from higher latitudes [than the Chinle frog] and not equatorial." The discovery of the Chinle frog may also be a sign of things to come. "Now [that] we know that tiny frogs were present approximately 215 million years ago from North America, we may be able to find other members of the modern vertebrate communities in the Triassic period," study co-researcher Sterling Nesbitt, an assistant professor of geosciences at Virginia Tech, said in the statement. Source
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Born On: March 3, 1839 Born In: Navsari, Gujarat, India Died On: May 19, 1904 Occupation: Industrialist, Entrepreneur Nationality: Indian Whenever we think of the name Jamsetji Tata, we think of the expansive Tata Group of companies which continue to rule the industrial world of India till today. Jamsetji Tata founded the vast industrial empire that has received an identity today all over the world. Jamsetji Tata belonged to a trading family and business ran in his blood, therefore it was quite natural that he chose to be a businessman very early in his life. However, little did anybody know that Jamsetji Tata would be successful in redefining the concept of industries in India and would be listed in the pages of history as the 'Father of Indian Industry'! Early Life Born as Jamsetji Nusserwanji Tata on March 3, 1839, Jamsetji Tata was the son of Nusserwanji Tata, the only businessman in a Parsi family that earned its living as Zoroastrian priests. Along with his wife Jeevanbai Tata, Nusserwanji Tata had moved out of his family to carry on his passion of business in Bombay. Nusserwanji Tata started off as a small trader, but nevertheless did quite well. Jamsetji Tata completed his graduation at Elphinstone College in Bombay, where he was known as such a bright student that the principal decided to refund Jamsetji Tata's fees once he completed his degree. Jamsetji Tata took up trading at a very early age of 14, a time when he was still studying. Since child marriage was practiced during those days, the future business tycoon got married at the tender age of sixteen to the ten year old Hirabai Daboo. He graduated from college in 1858 and joined his father's trading firm. It was a turbulent time to step into business as the Indian Rebellion of 1857 had just been suppressed by the British government. Career As A Businessman Though Jamestji Tata started off working ever since he was 14, his real contribution came only after he had graduated in 1858. He became actively involved in his father's export business at a time when the business scenario in India was far from prosperous, largely because of the Sepoy Mutiny of 1857, which had been suppressed by the British Raj and had taken India by storm. Nevertheless, Nusserwanji Tata sent his son on a trip to Hong Kong in 1859 to expand his business interests there, a work that Jamsetji Tata completed successfully. Jamsetji Tata remained in Hong Kong for the next four years, trying to fulfill and realize his father's dream of setting up a branch of the Tata & Co. office there. The establishment of the new Tata & Co. office in Hong Kong was the beginning of the expansion of the Tata empire throughout Asia and the first step towards the creation of Tata & Sons. By the year 1863, there were Tata offices not only in Hong Kong, but also in Japan and China. Following the huge business success in Asia, Jamsetji Tata now traveled to Europe, but unlike in Asia, he faced with a drawback in the initial stages. Part of Jamsetji Tata's aims in visiting England, apart from increasing the number of contacts for his father's export business based in India, was to establish an Indian Bank in London. This project, however, proved highly unsuccessful for the Tatas because it was not a favorable time for the banking sector, with a financial crisis hitting the markets in several parts of India. The Tata companies in India and all over Asia faced huge monetary loss after the failure of the establishment of the Indian bank. Later Stages of Career Jamsetji Tata worked with his father until the age of 29, after which he started a trading company of his own. This was in the year 1868, following which Jamsetji Tata gradually acquired and established several cotton mills of his own. The Empress Mill set up in Nagpur in 1874 brought Jamsetji Tata huge amounts of money. The name of the mill was so inspired after Queen Victoria became the Empress Of India. The mills made large amounts of profit, but were thereafter sold off by Jamsetji Tata for a higher sum of money. Jamsetji Tata's cotton mills produced cloth which were used in India and also exported to countries of Japan, Korea, China and several parts of the Middle East. The mills were largely established to satisfy Jamsetji Tata's business acumen, but it may be recalled that the Dharamsi cotton mill which was later renamed to Swadeshi cotton mill kept the nationalistic sentiment in mind and made use of only Indian products, particularly promoting the non-use of British raw material. Just like it is today, even in the pre-independent era, Jamsetji Tata made it a point to look after the best interests of the workers in Tata & Sons. The Tata companies were then also known to provide the best working atmosphere for its workers. Policies which were unheard of during those times, like medical facilities for the sick and for women with children, provision of pensions, accident compensations and on the job training, were a part of the companies owned by Jamsetji Tata. It was Jamsetji Tata who appealed to the Japanese Steam Navigation Company to reduce freight charges, a factor which was largely diminishing his profits. Though it was for the benefit for the entire nation, Jamsetji Tata made it a point to spend his own money to get the case solved when his demands led to huge upheavals in Japan. Eventually, Jamsetji Tata did emerge successful in reducing freight charges and thereby increasing profits for Indian traders. Business Legacy The cotton mills did satisfy his business acumen, but to remain stuck on the production of cloth was not the aim of Jamsetji Tata. His vision was to establish an iron and steel plant, a world class hotel, a learning institution and a hydro electric power project. Among his four wishes, only the second was fulfilled during Jamsetji Tata's lifetime when the Taj Mahal Hotel was established on December 3, 1903. In 1901, Jamsetji Tata traveled to Europe and America to educate himself on the making of steel. In addition, he made it a point to educate himself on the latest technological progress that had taken place over the years all around the world so that he may use it for the betterment of the industries under Tata & Sons. Sadly, Jamsetji Tata could not stay alive to realize his dream of establishing an iron and steel plant in India. Death Jamsetji Tata breathed his last on May 19, 1904. He was the sole inspiration behind a group that today is one of the biggest industries of not only India but of the world also. Legacy Post Jamshetji Tata's death, The Tata Group was succeeded by his two sons, Dorabji Tata and Ratanji Tata. One of the most affluent, prosperous and well-to-do organizations, the Tata Group is today amongst the largest and most respected companies of the world. A pioneer of his field, the vision and aim of Jamsetji Tata came to life with time as his family gave wings to each of his dream projects. In fact, such was his contribution that the city of Jamshedpur in Jhakhand is today po[CENSORED]rly known as Tatanagar, because of the many facilities that the group has endowed the city with. Today, the group boasts of being the founder of projects like Tata Steel, the Indian Institute of Science, the Tata Power Company Limited, the Taj Mahal Palace & Tower, the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research and many more. Timeline 1839: Jamsetji Tata was born on March 3. 1853: He married Hirabai Daboo. 1858: Joined his father's trade firm. 1868: Established his first independent company. 1874: Set up the Empress Mill. 1901: Traveled to Europe and America to receive education on making of steel. 1903: Established the Taj Mahal Hotel. 1904: Died on May 19. Source
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[Auto-Moto] Zenvo TS1 GT review hypercar with a hefty price tag
-Sethu posted a topic in Auto / Moto
By charging £1,200,000 for its new hypercar, Zenvo is slotting itself into a corner of the fast car world where very good simply isn't enough. As it is, the TS1 GT falls a long way short. Avoiding the Zenvo’s shortcomings The Zenvo ST1, as it was known back then, first started appearing on magazine covers almost a decade ago. The Danish company has been hanging around on the sidelines for a while now but, having been acquired by a Russian billionaire a couple of years ago, it finally has the heavyweight backing it needs to bring a car to market. Now badged TS1 GT, Zenvo’s hypercar is ready to take on the likes of the Bugatti Chiron and Pagani Huayra. Well, it’s almost ready. Bright as a solar flare, this lime-green car is a pre-production prototype rather than the finished product. It’s in the UK for a short while for late-stage testing, mostly in low-speed driving conditions, and also to drum up some interest in the hunt for deposits. We’ll have to excuse certain shortcomings for the time being, then. What we’re searching for is potential. Looking at the Zenvo’s mechanicals It either looks like it’s been lifted straight out of an arcade game or as though Lockheed Martin has had its first crack at a performance car. I can’t decide which. Either way, it’s quite the thing to behold, with its gaping intakes and impossibly low glasshouse, but it's also cohesive and well-rounded. What’s most impressive about the way the car looks is that you couldn’t attribute it to any other supercar manufacturer; it isn’t at all derivative. There’s a flattened hexagon design theme on the outside that builds to a mad, six-sided frenzy within the cabin. There are hexagons everywhere you look, from the navigation screen surround to the stitching in the seats, as though hexagons spread like a virus if left untreated. It isn’t unattractive, actually, but Zenvo should have dropped the whole hexagon thing when it got to designing the steering wheel. The milled-from-aluminium switchgear and speaker grilles look the part, meanwhile, and they are at least bespoke to this car, but somehow the cabin just doesn’t feel as exceptional as it should given the asking price. For £1.2 million, I want to be blown away. As for standard equipment, the TS1 GT gets all the aerodynamic finery expected on a hypercar, plus LED headlights on the outside. Inside, there is dual-zone climate control, cruise control, keyless entry, electrically adjustable carbonfibre based seats and Zenvo’s infotainment system complete with sat nav, a touchscreen display, Bluetooth and USB connectivity, DAB radio and a digital instrument cluster. Turning over the Zenvo TS1’s engine With 1163bhp, 811lb ft and a pair of superchargers, perhaps that’s exactly what the engine will do. The 5.8-litre V8 is Zenvo’s own design. Zenvo realised superchargers were easier to cool than exhaust-driven turbochargers. Besides, using a pair of superchargers is completely unique and, I think, a big part of the car’s appeal. The boost will be turned all the way up for production versions, but with the engineers focusing on driveability and low-speed manners for the time being, this engine has been wound down to a miserable 750bhp. Let’s hope we don't happen upon too many steep inclines. There are a number of transmission options including, believe it or not, a six-speed manual. There’s also a paddle shift gearbox with conventional synchromesh or, if you want the rawest experience and quickest shifts possible, a dog ring paddle shift transmission. That was the option fitted to the test car and, as we’ll find out, there’s still an awful lot of development work to be done. The TS1 GT drives its rear wheels via a Torsen limited-slip differential. This car also has optional carbon ceramic brakes from Brembo, with Michelin Pilot Super Sport rubber on 19in wheels on the front axle and 20in ones on the rear. With launch control, 62mph is dispatched in 2.8sec. Suspension is by double wishbones all round with passive KW dampers. Zenvo’s common-sense approach Unlike just about every other car that dares reference that word ‘hyper’, the Zenvo is built around a conventional steel and aluminium monocoque rather than a carbonfibre tub. Despite fully carbon bodywork, the TS1 GT is therefore a little on the flabby side, weighing in at 1710kg. Talking of flab, Zenvo knows very well that most people who can afford to drop £1.2m on a play thing are very often not undernourished. That’s why the door openings are quite large and the cabin fairly spacious. The TS1 GT isn’t a difficult car to get into or out of, and there’s even a useful 135-litre storage compartment beneath the front clamshell. For now, the seats are set a little too high and you don’t sink into them, which means you feel like you’re perched up on a stool. Zenvo’s marketing literature describes the car as a hyper-GT; it has been developed, supposedly, to be luxurious and comfortable over long distances. On bumpy Buckinghamshire B-roads close to Super Veloce Racing, the first appointed Zenvo dealer, the TS1 GT felt tight and fidgety, but never unreasonably stiff or crashy. Ignore the constant fidgeting and secondary patter and you do notice the poise and composure in the chassis, the taut body control and the fluid shrugging off of compressions. The hydraulic steering is very good, too, or it is once you’ve got a little lock on. Around the centre point, it’s quite vague and glassy, but beyond that it becomes very direct, with a natural weighting and rate of response. It allows you to lean on the massive front-end grip right away the way you would in a smaller sports car. The TS1 GT feels well balanced in corners and has massive traction despite the huge power and torque. Even some 400bhp shy of its ultimate power output, the engine is a total monster. Without any smothering turbochargers, it has immediate throttle response and a rich, bassy soundtrack too. The progressive, linear power delivery is completely addictive, meanwhile, the rate of acceleration building to a panic-inducing rampage as the motor charges towards the 7700rpm redline. Lord only knows what this car will feel like with half as much power again. Terrifying, I would guess. Admitting the TS1 GT’s flaws It’s a wonderful engine, no doubt, but for the time being it’s mated to a less-than-impressive gearbox. On a wide open throttle in the upper reaches of the rev range, the shifts are quick and clean, but everywhere else they’re lurchy and shunty. The ignition cut on half throttle upshifts is so abrupt that pulling the right hand paddle is like quickly jabbing the brake pedal. There are other problems, such as the long, spongey brake pedal, but the biggest issue I have with the car is its asking price. Super Veloce Racing hopes to find between two and five buyers per year, so they're realistic about volumes. And while Zenvo will almost certainly make good improvements in the final stages of development, I’m yet to be convinced that the TS1 GT will ever feel like an ultra-high-quality, crafted-by-artisans, jewel-like device the way a Pagani does. Super-demanding clients will be even harder to convince. Source -
Candidates are making last-ditch efforts to sway undecided voters in the last few days before the Nov. 8 election, with the current and former presidents lending their voices to campaign rallies. Democratic President Joe Biden and former President Barack Obama, along with former Republican President Donald Trump were all in Pennsylvania on Saturday, backing their candidate in the U.S. Senate race there. On Sunday, Biden heads to Westchester County, N.Y., where he'll campaign with Democratic Gov. Kathy Hochul. She is in a tightening race against Republican challenger Lee Zeldin. A handful of races will determine which party controls both congressional chambers. While Republicans are expected to take over the House of Representatives, the Senate is a toss-up. Republicans hold a significant advantage among voters in the newly drawn 1st and 4th districts. They hold a slight edge in the 2nd and 3rd districts. The Iowa Poll, conducted by Selzer & Co. from Oct. 31 to Nov. 3, asked 801 likely voters or those who have already cast ballots whether they favor the Democratic or Republican candidate for the U.S. House. Claims of a hacked or stolen election worry security officials Despite an unprecedented U.S. focus on preventing hackers from targeting the midterm elections Tuesday, there are still concerns that malicious cyber operatives could disrupt or influence the vote by penetrating polling stations, voter registration rolls, ballot-counting efforts and even the news reports that tell Americans who’s winning state, local and federal elections. But here’s what really concerns public and private sector security analysts: malicious cyber actors who claim that the election was hacked or stolen, even when nothing of the sort occurred. Such false claims, building on years of bogus election fraud narratives that began well before the 2020 presidential election, they say, could plunge the country into an unprecedented environment of political chaos and violence even worse than that which spawned the Jan. 6, 2021 attack at the U.S. Capitol. In the week before the Nov. 8 midterm election, candidates in battleground states faced off in their final debates and, possibly, their final opportunities to sway undecided voters. Key issues including abortion and inflation took center stage. And despite efforts by moderators and citizen questioners to get candidates to explain their positions in detail or elaborate on under-the-radar issues, Republicans and Democrats largely stuck to their well-rehearsed talking points. Georgia gubernatorial candidates Gov. Brian Kemp and Stacey Abrams and New Hampshire Senate candidates Sen. Maggie Hassan and Don Bolduc were among the candidate that faced off a final time before Election Day. Source
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As Election Day quickly approaches, you've likely heard this election is the most important of our lifetime. But is it really? Or is it a ploy to persuade us that it is? When you watch, listen, scroll through social media or read an election flyer from your mailbox have you ever stopped and asked yourself, "who paid for this?" According to Research Director Michael Beckel from Issue One, a nonpartisan, nonprofit group that seeks to lessen the influence of money on politics, you should. Hello, and welcome to 5 Things. Go Bills. Every week we take a question, an idea, or concept and go deep, and this week, we'll follow the money. It's that time again, politicians say it every couple of years. In case, you haven't heard it before, it's always the most important election of our lifetime. Or maybe it's just another election. It depends on who you ask. If the races in your area are close at all, your neighborhood, in your mailbox, in your inbox, in your TV, in your radio, in your social media feeds are all stuffed with political ads. I'm getting annoyed just thinking about them. But we should think about them. The goal of these ads is to swing elections, so let's take a few minutes to ask where these ads are coming from. Some come from obvious places like Republicans supporting Republicans, or Democrats supporting Democrats, but honestly, it's harder to tell who is buying these ads. According to today's guest, that's on purpose. For a decade, Michael Beckel has researched these issues. He works for Issue One, a non-partisan non-profit group, seeking less influence of money on politics. We should care about this kind of spending because there are a host of groups trying to influence our votes. We've got democratic groups trying to mobilize their base. We've got Republican groups trying to mobilize their base. And both of those groups are fighting over the independent voters who help swing elections. And in the last decade, we've seen a proliferation. There are ads coming at you that are sponsored by the candidates. Those are very easy to understand. They're the ads that have the candidate themselves in there saying, "I'm so and so, and I approve this message." You also see ads now from groups that can raise unlimited amounts of money, the so-called Super PACs and Dark Money groups, some of which don't even have to disclose their donors, and they often are masquerading with very innocuous sounding names and not making it easy to identify whether they're a liberal group or a conservative group. James Brown: So let's take that apart. We'll start with who these groups are. Who's funding them? Michael Beckel: Yeah, that is the million dollar question. You've seen a proliferation of groups since the Supreme Court Citizens United decision back in 2010, and these groups often pop up for sometimes just one election, and they brand themselves with a very innocuous sounding name, a very local sounding name, something that might resonate with the viewers in that particular media market, that particular state. And they're trying to strike the right chord with a persuasive message. And the political science research actually says that people are more persuaded by ads from innocuous sounding group name that doesn't carry any baggage. If you see an ad that's clearly identifiable as a Republican group or clearly identifiable as a democratic group, and you've got your biases about whether you trust Republicans or Democrats, whether you mistrust them, if you don't trust the messenger, you're not going to trust the message. But with all of these newly formed groups that are out there, the messenger isn't really known, and so that people are more likely to accept the message that they're seeing. And it can take a lot of digging. Source