Friday, November 30, 2007

Inside of Kaaba

These images press moment exit Custodian of the Two Holy Masjids, King Abdullah bin Abdul Aziz and his brethren leaders of the Islamic world from the Kaaba,
shown in the images of the inside wall of Kaaba, color green, as well as one of the pillars and some lanterns commentator.

Thursday, November 29, 2007

5 Ways To Stay Focused On Your Goals

No matter how excited you are about your business, with so many distractions and things that may be going on in your life, you can easily find yourself losing focus on your goals and what you want to accomplish. Below you will find 5 things that will help you stay focused on your goals.

FINISH WHAT YOU STARTEDY
ou probably have heard the saying, "So many things to do and not enough time to do them." Even though that may be true, you still have to complete them all, especially if these things help you to reach your goals. To make it easier for you, just take 1 thing you have to do and complete that task until it is done. When it is done, you will feel a sense of accomplishment and it will motivate you to move on to your next task.

ORGANIZE TO MAKE THINGS EASY AND SIMPLE
Take a moment to put things in order. If people write to you or send you orders in the mail, make 3 piles. Put the letters that need to be answered right away in the 1st pile. Letters that can be answered at a later date you can put in the 2nd pile and letters that have orders in them, you can put in the 3rd pile. Doing things like this in other areas of your life will help you keep things in priority and keep you focused on your goals.

CHANGE THE WAY YOU LOOK AT THINGS
If you find yourself at times having a negative attitude, you must realize that the way you look at things can make all the difference when it comes to reaching your goals. Even when obstacles stand in your way, maintaining a positive attitude, not a negative one and knowing that things can and will get better, will help you stay on track in reaching your goals.

UNDERSTAND GOALS WILL TAKE TIME TO REACH
Everything in life, if it is worth it, will take time. This goes for the goals you set for yourself. When you set goals, you should set 2 types of goals. A short term goal such as 6 months and also a long range goal, such as 3 years. You must realize that you are not going to reach your long term goals in 2 weeks. Whatever your goals may be, only through hard work, determination and keeping yourself focused, this is the way you will eventually reach your goals.

STUDY AND READ ARTICLES ON MOTIVATION
Reading articles, books or even listening to cassette tapes on motivation is a must if you want to keep yourself focused on your goals. Many successful people will tell you that even when they wanted to give up and throw in the towel, a paragraph in a book or something a motivational speaker said put them back on the right track and helped them reach their goals. So if you want to stay focused on your goals, take these 5 points and put them into action today.

See Why Petrol Is So Costly

AN ENGINEERING MASTER PIECE
During the construction phase......
Dubai , United Arab Emirates
All finished. Notice the palm trees outside..... .....
Remember, this is in the middle of the desert....
The very HOT desert where temperatures get up to 120 degrees.....
Unbelievable!
But true.....

The INSIDE view :
And you wonder why petrol is Rs. 50 per liter....!!

Tuesday, November 27, 2007

How to Win Friends and Influence People

Fundamental Techniques in Handling People
1. Don't criticize, condemn or complain.
2. Give honest and sincere appreciation.
3. Arouse in the other person an eager want.

Six Ways to Make People Like You

1. Become genuinely interested in other people.
2. Smile.
3. Remember that a person's name is to that person the sweetest and most important sound in any language.
4. Be a good listener. Encourage others to talk about themselves.
5. Talk in terms of the other person's interests.
6. Make the other person feel important - and do it sincerely.

Win People to Your Way of Thinking

1. The only way to get the best of an argument is to avoid it.
2. Show respect for the other person's opinions. Never say, "You're wrong."
3. If you are wrong, admit it quickly and emphatically.
4. Begin in a friendly way.
5. Get the other person saying "yes, yes" immediately.
6. Let the other person do a great deal of the talking.
7. Let the other person feel that the idea is his or hers.
8. Try honestly to see things from the other person's point of view.
9. Be sympathetic with the other person's ideas and desires.
10 Appeal to the nobler motives.
11. Dramatize your ideas.
12. Throw down a challenge.

Be a Leader: How to Change People Without Giving Offense or Arousing Resentment
A leader's job often includes changing your people's attitudes and behavior. Some suggestions to accomplish this:
1. Begin with praise and honest appreciation.
2. Call attention to people's mistakes indirectly.
3. Talk about your own mistakes before criticizing the other person.
4. Ask questions instead of giving direct orders.
5. Let the other person save face.
6. Praise the slightest improvement and praise every improvement. Be "hearty in your approbation and lavish in your praise."
7. Give the other person a fine reputation to live up to.
8. Use encouragement. Make the fault seem easy to correct.
9. Make the other person happy about doing the thing you suggest.

Sunday, November 25, 2007

7 Simple Techniques Ready Site for Search

By KEITH ROBINSON
Search Engine Optimization (SEO) is probably the least understood aspect of Web design and marketing. It’s a world of secret sauce, voodoo and complicated algorithms. The are few facts, no guarantees and lots of wishing on a star when it comes to SEO, and it doesn’t have to be that way. Sure, you could pay an SEO consultant to optimize your site for you. You could pay someone to recommend keywords and submit your site to popular search engines. You could do all of these things and more and still, there will be no guarantee that it will help your rankings. More importantly, there is no guarantee it will drive the visitors you want and need to make your site successful. Rankings are important, but it’s relevant visits—those that turn visitors into customers—that really matter. While a vast industry of consulting, technology and services have grown around the promise of a SEO silver bullet, the saying, "There is no silver bullet," is ultimately true.

While SEO has its complications, it is simpler than it has been made to be. Simple ways you can optimize your site for search exist that are little more than well-applied common sense, a plan and some know-how. When it comes to SEO, and driving relevant visits, you’ll get the most bang for your buck by getting your content in order, having your site built the right way and taking the time to manage it and keep it fresh.

Content is, and always will be, king:

The most important thing you can do to assure your site is optimized for search is to provide great, relevant content. Put (very) simply, the best kind of Web content is relevant to your customers’ (and potential customers’) needs, and written with the Web in mind.
Search engines are all about indexing content. Without content, no amount of SEO trickery is going to help you in the long run, nor should it. By helping engines help people who are looking for information, you’re not only providing a service and making the Web an easier place to be, you’ll be helping increase your ranking and relevancy with search engines. When you’ve got good, current and relevant content people want to read—you’ve got something others may also want to link to.

Inbound Links Matter Most:

When it comes to SEO, the most important factor as it relates to ranking in a search engine, is how many inbound links you have and the quality of those inbound links—other highly ranked sites linking to your site are worth more that lower ranked sites. If you can provide content people want to link to, you’ll move up in the rankings. Again, it comes back to content, but it’s more than that. You should be actively soliciting links to your content. I don’t mean the (usually less than useful) typical link exchange techniques. I mean getting the word out that you’ve published something worth noting and keeping interest in your content high by keeping it always fresh and up-to-date. Content can be hard to get right, but when you do, and when you’ve got people interested and linking to you, you’re relevant visits, the visits that actually matter, will go way up.

Proper Page (and code) Structure:
This one may be tricky for those who don’t know HTML, but in essence it’s not that complicated. A properly coded and structured page will be easier to index. By using lean, clean, standard and semantic (i.e. meaningful) markup, you literally make a hierarchical map of your content and your site for a crawler to follow. This structure begins with proper titles (and therefore title tags) for your content, as well as keyword rich headings and well organized paragraphs. It can be a bit complicated and it does take some work to ensure your code is designed the right way. Quality code—from design to production—can make a huge difference in how your site is indexed. While there is an abundance of cut-rate code jockeys available, a development team with the skills to build the code with elegance will pay significant dividends both the site’s overall technical and search performance. Hiring Web developers who know and understand Web standards and best practices would be a good place to start.

On Keywords:

It can be a challenge to determine which keywords to use in your content to ensure higher rankings. However, this doesn’t have to be something you pay a consultant to sort out for you. If you are willing to do a bit of research on your own, you can do quite a bit of this yourself.
Note that when it comes to placing keywords, the titles of your pages and the content itself should be where you put your effort. Spamming (yes—spamming) a search engine with huge lists of keywords doesn’t help much – and may well get you blacklisted. As well, the keywords meta tag isn’t all that important anymore, a common myth of SEO. It helps, just not that much.
In order to leverage keywords for SEO, first, you’ll want to understand the goals of your site as they relate to search. For example, prioritize what you want people to find on your site, as well as what they might be looking for. It is important to consider the Web site from the perspective of the user, as they ultimately determine what’s valuable, and the words or relational terms they use to search on are most important. Many plug and play statistical software packages are available, providing information on what users are searching for. Once you’ve got those goals down and you have an understanding of your customers and how they use the Web, chances are you can make a pretty good guess as to some keywords and keyword phrases. You can then plug those keywords into tools like Suggestion Tool (www.suggestiontool.com) or Wordtracker (www.wordtracker.com) to see how they match up to actual searches.

Images:

Without help a search engine cannot index image or multimedia content. For that reason, and many others, a general rule of thumb would be to style textual content, such as navigation and headings, with Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) instead of using an image for text. When it comes to informational and decorative images on a Web page, proper coding of the ALT attribute is key. This is a good place to add a keyword rich description of the image. This doesn’t help a ton when it comes to SEO, but it does help some and has other benefits in terms of usability and accessibility.

Splash Pages & Home Pages:
Make sure that the top-level pages of your site have enough links on them to allow a crawler or spider to get down into the content of your site. If you’ve thought about having a Flash or image only splash page—think again—you’ll effectively be cutting the search engines off at the very beginning. If you’re curious as to what a crawler actually sees when going through your site, try using a search engine spider simulator (www.webconfs.com/search-engine-spider-simulator.php). If nothing shows up, you’ve got some work to do.

Be Patient:

It can take quite a while for engines to re-index and re-rank your site once you’ve made some changes. I recently worked on a project where I was asked to restructure a site’s pages to rank higher on a very specific search phrase. When I started the site was ranked on page 6 in Google and it actually moved down to page 8 before it moved up to page 1 a few months later.
It’s easy to want to go back on any changes you make if immediate results aren’t realized. Search engines are smart, but they take time to sort through the vast amounts of information that’s thrown at them. Be patient and you’ll see results.

It’s Not Rocket Science...

SEO does take effort and know-how. It begins with your content (hopefully good enough to get people to link to it) and the clean, meaningful structure of your code. Those two things combined will do more for your efforts in regards to SEO than almost any other trick or technique you could try (or buy).

Golden Speech

1. Never tell die!
2. Hit him hard he doesn’t have a friend!
3. When I die, the world die with me!
4. The priests are always say:
Do whatever I say, not I do
5. To deceive the deceiver is not deceived!
6. First do then say!
7. A man of secret should be with a man who knows it!
8. Two wrongs don’t make a right!
9. Misfortunate tells what fortunate is!
10. Everything is good in its season!
11. Be the first say Hello!
12. Every thing is not banana.
13. Never blame an Innocent person!
14. Always be honest!
15. Tomorrow never comes but arrives!

Suicide Blast Cases

Suicide may have psychological origins such as the difficulty of coping with depression or other mental disorders; it may be motivated by the desire to test the affection of loved ones or to punish their lack of support with the burden of guilt. It may also stem from social and cultural pressures, especially those that tend to increase isolation, such as bereavement or estrangement. Attitudes toward suicide have varied in different ages and cultures; convicted criminals in ancient Greece were permitted to take their own lives, and the Japanese custom of seppuku (also called hara-kiri), or self-disembowelment, allowed samurai to commit ritual suicide as a way of protecting honor and demonstrating loyalty. Jews committed suicide rather than submit to ancient Roman conquerors or crusading knights who intended to force their conversion. In the 20th century, members of new religious movements, notably the Peoples Temple and Heaven's Gate, committed mass suicide. Buddhist monks and nuns have also committed sacrificial suicide by self-immolation as a form of social protest. Japan's use of kamikaze suicide bombers during World War II was a precursor to the suicide bombing that emerged in the late 20th century as a form of terrorism, particularly among Islamic extremists. Suicide, however, is generally condemned by Islam, Judaism, and Christianity, and attempts to commit suicide are still punishable by law in many countries. Some communities around the world have sought to legalize physician-assisted suicide for the terminally ill. Euthanasia was legalized in The Netherlands in 2001 and Belgium in 2002, and it is openly practiced in Colombia. Since the 1950s suicide-prevention organizations have been established in many countries, with telephone hot lines serving as a source of readily available counseling.

Those who believe in the finality of death (i.e., that there is no after-life) – they are the ones who advocate suicide and regard it as a matter of personal choice. On the other hand, those who firmly believe in some form of existence after corporeal death – they condemn suicide and judge it to be a major sin. Yet, rationally, the situation should have been reversed: it should have been easier for someone who believed in continuity after death to terminate this phase of existence on the way to the next. Those who faced void, finality, non-existence, vanishing – should have been greatly deterred by it and should have refrained even from entertaining the idea. Either the latter do not really believe what they profess to believe – or something is wrong with rationality. One would tend to suspect the former. Suicide is very different from self sacrifice, avoidable martyrdom, engaging in life risking activities, refusal to prolong one's life through medical treatment, euthanasia, overdosing and self inflicted death that is the result of coercion. What is common to all these is the operational mode: a death caused by one's own actions. In all these behaviors, a foreknowledge of the risk of death is present coupled with its acceptance. But all else is so different that they cannot be regarded as belonging to the same class. Suicide is chiefly intended to terminate a life – the other acts are aimed at perpetuating, strengthening and defending values. Those who commit suicide do so because they firmly believe in the finiteness of life and in the finality of death. They prefer termination to continuation. Yet, all the others, the observers of this phenomenon, are horrified by this preference. They abhor it. This has to do with out understanding of the meaning of life.

Ultimately, life has only meanings that we attribute and ascribe to it. Such a meaning can be external (God's plan) or internal (meaning generated through arbitrary selection of a frame of reference). But, in any case, it must be actively selected, adopted and espoused. The difference is that, in the case of external meanings, we have no way to judge their validity and quality (is God's plan for us a good one or not?). We just "take them on" because they are big, all encompassing and of a good "source". A hyper-goal generated by a super structural plan tends to lend meaning to our transient goals and structures by endowing them with the gift of eternity. Something eternal is always judged more meaningful than something temporal. If a thing of less or no value acquires value by becoming part of a thing eternal – than the meaning and value reside with the quality of being eternal – not with the thing thus endowed. It is not a question of success. Plans temporal are as successfully implemented as designs eternal. Actually, there is no meaning to the question: is this eternal plan / process / design successful because success is a temporal thing, linked to endeavors that have clear beginnings and ends.