- B.Sc. Part-I, M.A. (Prev) Sans, M.Sc. (Prev) Pharma. Chem., PG Diploma in Legal & Forensic Science, Labour Law & Lab. Welf, Criminology & Crim. Admn Results 2008
University of Bikaner
- Announced on 4th July, 2008
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Friday, July 4, 2008
BBAU, Lucknow Results 2008 declared
- Entrance Exam Results 2008
- Announced on 4th July, 2008
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Babasaheb Bhimrao Ambedkar University (BBAU)
Entrance Exams Results 2008
List of Candidates selected for Counselling
Department of Biotechnology
General Category
PH Category
SC Category
ST Category
Human Resources and Family Development
General, SC Category, Waiting List of General Category
- Announced on 4th July, 2008
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Babasaheb Bhimrao Ambedkar University (BBAU)
Entrance Exams Results 2008
List of Candidates selected for Counselling
Department of Biotechnology
General Category
PH Category
SC Category
ST Category
Human Resources and Family Development
General, SC Category, Waiting List of General Category
Allahabad University Results 2008 declared
- Notice for B.A. UGAT 2008
- Announced on 4th July, 2008
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Entrance Exams Results 2008
Notice for B.A. UGAT 2008
Notice for B.Com. UGAT 2008
Notice for B.Sc. UGAT 2008
MCA 2008
Announced
Diploma In Fashion design
Announced
BA In Fashion Design
Announced
Diploma In E design
Announced
MSc Food Technology 2008-09
Announced
MSc Nutritional Sciences 2008-09
Announced
Post Graduate Diploma in Computer
Applications (PGDCA)
Announced
B.A. Admission Test Results 2008
Announced
B.Com Admission Test Results 2008
Announced
B.Sc. Admission Test Results 2008
Announced
DCA Entrance Exam 2008-09
Announced
DIT Entrance Exam 2008-09
Announced
- Announced on 4th July, 2008
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Entrance Exams Results 2008
Notice for B.A. UGAT 2008
Notice for B.Com. UGAT 2008
Notice for B.Sc. UGAT 2008
MCA 2008
Announced
Diploma In Fashion design
Announced
BA In Fashion Design
Announced
Diploma In E design
Announced
MSc Food Technology 2008-09
Announced
MSc Nutritional Sciences 2008-09
Announced
Post Graduate Diploma in Computer
Applications (PGDCA)
Announced
B.A. Admission Test Results 2008
Announced
B.Com Admission Test Results 2008
Announced
B.Sc. Admission Test Results 2008
Announced
DCA Entrance Exam 2008-09
Announced
DIT Entrance Exam 2008-09
Announced
Shilpa Shetty raises 63,000 pound for charity
Shilpa Shetty who was awarded the Global Diversity award managed to raise 63,000 pounds for charity on the gala night.The star event of the night was when Shilpa auctioned her kisses for a cool 12, 500 pounds to an admirer.
The actress won the prestigious ‘Global Diversity’ award along with British racing driver Lewis Hamilton for making significant contribution to the public appreciation and understanding of diversity.
She also helped the organizers to raise 63,000 pounds for a charity - the Silver Star Appeal - that runs mobile diabetes assessment units
Stepping in to enthuse the charity auction, the Bollywood actress climbed up to the stage, took the mike and told the audience that the winner would get a “kiss from me”.
But Shilpa was quick to add, “It will be on the cheek. I don’t want my effigies burnt again.”
She was obviously referring to the controversy over the Hollywood star Richard Gere kissing her on stage during an AIDS awareness event in New Delhi in April last year which resulted in some Hindu nationalists burning her effigies and slapping court cases against her and Gere in India.
Her admirer got three kisses on his cheek.
Source: http://www.newsline365.com
Angelina's pregnancy notes
Pregnancy is quite an emotional roller-coaster for the moms-to-be, and Angelina Jolie does not want to forget the ride; hence she keeps a diary!Angelina Jolie who is pregnant with twins [the secret delivery news is yet to be confirmed] for her super hot blonde husband Brad Pitt, has been keeping a diary to chronicle her feelings, thoughts and emotions throughout the pregnancy. The diary is so personal that even Brad has not been allowed a glimpse into its contents! A close friend to Angelina says that the diary carries detailed descriptions of Angelina's emotional state and that includes any pent up anger at her husband!
This diary has all the makings of a book that could notch up some fat green bills... Publishers, are you listening?
Source: http://english.galatta.com
Row brews over DTH set-top boxes
NEW DELHI: A row appears to be brewing between major direct-to-home service providers over interoperability of set-top boxes (that allow consumers to shift from one DTH company to another without changing the STB) that could jeopardise consumer interest.
Reliance Big TV Ltd has complained against an established DTH operator alleging that not only are the company's STBs not compliant with the latest technology but that the company was trying to block out bringing the revised norms.
Operators like Tata Sky and Dish TV use MPEG-2 which comply with BIS standards but have been accused by Big TV of using an 'obsolete' format. Big TV is using MPEG-4 format, a technology that will substantially improve video quality and save over 30% transmission bandwidth allowing more channels to be telecast.
Big TV — eying the competition's subscriber base — has complained to the I&B ministry that while its STBs can support a consumer who wants to switch to Tata Sky or Dish TV, the reverse is not possible. It has also asked the government to revise BIS norms and implement TRAI's guidelines.
TRAI's guidelines suggest a revision of BIS standards and that they be made applicable to those subscribers who are enrolled six months after the revision of standards. It has said that the existing subscribers need not change their STBs.
Source: http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com
Reliance Big TV Ltd has complained against an established DTH operator alleging that not only are the company's STBs not compliant with the latest technology but that the company was trying to block out bringing the revised norms.
Operators like Tata Sky and Dish TV use MPEG-2 which comply with BIS standards but have been accused by Big TV of using an 'obsolete' format. Big TV is using MPEG-4 format, a technology that will substantially improve video quality and save over 30% transmission bandwidth allowing more channels to be telecast.
Big TV — eying the competition's subscriber base — has complained to the I&B ministry that while its STBs can support a consumer who wants to switch to Tata Sky or Dish TV, the reverse is not possible. It has also asked the government to revise BIS norms and implement TRAI's guidelines.
TRAI's guidelines suggest a revision of BIS standards and that they be made applicable to those subscribers who are enrolled six months after the revision of standards. It has said that the existing subscribers need not change their STBs.
Source: http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com
LimeWire 4.18.3
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LimeWire PRO get turbo-chargedFastest P2P downloads on the planet
No spyware, adware, or bundled software
Built-in media player
Downloads from multiple hosts
International versions
Windows, Mac and Linux compatible
Get Pro Optimized search results
Turbo-charged downloads
Connections to more sources
More Reliable Downloads
Special PRO only skin
FREE tech support
FREE updates for up to 6 months
Get Pro for a single payment of only $21.95
Get Basic Extend your PRO benefits!
Get PRO for 1 year for only $34.95!
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G-8 leaders face ominous economic woes this year
By MALCOLM FOSTER, AP Business Writer
SAPPORO, Japan - Between surging oil prices, food inflation and a credit crunch that's depressed global growth, leaders from the Group of Eight economic powers face the gravest combination of economic woes in at least a decade when they gather next week.
The outlook has darkened dramatically since last year's summit in Germany, when the leaders declared the global economy was in "good condition" and oil cost $70 a barrel — which seemed high at the time.
Since then, the U.S. subprime mortgage crisis has erupted, roiling markets and battering financial firms. Oil has doubled to above $140 and food prices have jumped, hurting the poor in particular and raising the threat of political instability.
"Things have changed for the worse across the board," said Robert Hormats, vice chairman at Goldman Sachs (International) Corp. in New York.
Hormats argues that the economic problems now are more serious and widespread than during the Asian financial crisis of 1997-98, where the pain was largely limited to emerging markets.
"Now you have a financial disorder where the epicenter is the U.S.," he said. And fuel and food inflation "are serious matters that affect large numbers of people."
Host Japan put global warming at the top of the summit's agenda, but the dilemma of how to respond to accelerating inflation and slowing global economic growth could grab the spotlight.
Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda has said he hopes the July 7-9 meeting at a hot springs resort in Hokkaido, Japan's northern island, will "show some direction" in tackling oil and food prices but stressed it was only "one step" in a longer process.
On oil, analysts are skeptical that the G-8 leaders — representing the U.S., Japan, Britain, France, Germany, Russia, Italy and Canada — will come up with much beyond urging major petroleum producers to boost output, reiterating the message of their finance ministers, who met last month in Osaka.
Foreshadowing possible disagreement among the leaders, the finance ministers were divided on where to assign blame for the run-up in oil prices. Germany, France and Italy held speculators largely accountable, while the U.S. and Britain said the focus needed to be on boosting production capacity that has barely kept up with growing global demand.
Soaring crude prices have already forced India, Malaysia, and Indonesia to cut subsidies and raise state-set prices on gasoline and other fuels. Last month, China hiked fuel prices as much as 18 percent.
At the same time, prices of corn, wheat, rice, soybeans and other farm goods have surged due to changing diets, urbanization, expanding populations, extreme weather, growth in biofuel production and speculation.
Spiraling fuel and food costs could drive millions into poverty, the Asian Development Bank has warned. In India, inflation has jumped to a 13-year high of 11.4 percent.
On the food front, the G-8 leaders may announce an aid package or pledging agricultural investment in poorer countries, experts say.
The credit crisis and global market turmoil are sure to be discussed, but with central bankers absent the leaders will most likely avoid saying anything specific about interest rates and currencies. The European Central Bank raised its benchmark interest rate a quarter point Thursday, suggesting it saw inflation as a greater threat than slower growth.
Overall, the summit's main goal will be demonstrating confidence that they can "work through the oil crisis without causing the global economy to melt down," said Tom Cooley, dean of New York University's Stern School of Business.
Given the meeting's emphasis on climate change, the leaders could highlight the links between energy issues and global warming by stressing the importance of energy efficiency and alternative forms of energy, said Hormats of Goldman Sachs.
"The key thing is not what they do at these meetings but what they do at home," he said.
Oil and energy have remained recurring themes at the annual summits, said Hormats, who participated in several of the first meetings, which started in 1975. The initial gathering came after the 1973-74 oil embargo, when fuel prices surged after Middle East oil producers cut off the U.S. and other countries supporting Israel.
"We now have another oil crisis," Hormats said.
The summits were originally meant to focus on economic issues, but the agenda has expanded to include terrorism, Africa's development and the environment.
The group's membership also has grown from six to eight, adding Canada in 1976 and more recently Russia in 1997.
But many argue that it should be expanded to include China, the world's fourth-largest economy, and other emerging powerhouses like India and Brazil — especially to tackle global issues like energy and climate change.
"At what point will the G-8 realize we're no longer the steering committee for the world economy?" said Lael Brainard, a former deputy national economic adviser in the Clinton administration who attended several summits in the 1990s and now is a director at the Brookings Institution, a Washington think tank.
Already, the G-8 has been reaching out. It plans meetings with African leaders on the summit's first day, and later with leaders from China, India, Mexico, Brazil and South Africa — countries that someday might be a part of the Group of 13.
"These countries are critical to the solution of any of these problems," said Brainard. "I believe it's only a matter of time" until the club expands.
___
Associated Press writers Joe Coleman and Shino Yuasa in Tokyo contributed to this report.
Source: http://news.yahoo.com
SAPPORO, Japan - Between surging oil prices, food inflation and a credit crunch that's depressed global growth, leaders from the Group of Eight economic powers face the gravest combination of economic woes in at least a decade when they gather next week.
The outlook has darkened dramatically since last year's summit in Germany, when the leaders declared the global economy was in "good condition" and oil cost $70 a barrel — which seemed high at the time.
Since then, the U.S. subprime mortgage crisis has erupted, roiling markets and battering financial firms. Oil has doubled to above $140 and food prices have jumped, hurting the poor in particular and raising the threat of political instability.
"Things have changed for the worse across the board," said Robert Hormats, vice chairman at Goldman Sachs (International) Corp. in New York.
Hormats argues that the economic problems now are more serious and widespread than during the Asian financial crisis of 1997-98, where the pain was largely limited to emerging markets.
"Now you have a financial disorder where the epicenter is the U.S.," he said. And fuel and food inflation "are serious matters that affect large numbers of people."
Host Japan put global warming at the top of the summit's agenda, but the dilemma of how to respond to accelerating inflation and slowing global economic growth could grab the spotlight.
Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda has said he hopes the July 7-9 meeting at a hot springs resort in Hokkaido, Japan's northern island, will "show some direction" in tackling oil and food prices but stressed it was only "one step" in a longer process.
On oil, analysts are skeptical that the G-8 leaders — representing the U.S., Japan, Britain, France, Germany, Russia, Italy and Canada — will come up with much beyond urging major petroleum producers to boost output, reiterating the message of their finance ministers, who met last month in Osaka.
Foreshadowing possible disagreement among the leaders, the finance ministers were divided on where to assign blame for the run-up in oil prices. Germany, France and Italy held speculators largely accountable, while the U.S. and Britain said the focus needed to be on boosting production capacity that has barely kept up with growing global demand.
Soaring crude prices have already forced India, Malaysia, and Indonesia to cut subsidies and raise state-set prices on gasoline and other fuels. Last month, China hiked fuel prices as much as 18 percent.
At the same time, prices of corn, wheat, rice, soybeans and other farm goods have surged due to changing diets, urbanization, expanding populations, extreme weather, growth in biofuel production and speculation.
Spiraling fuel and food costs could drive millions into poverty, the Asian Development Bank has warned. In India, inflation has jumped to a 13-year high of 11.4 percent.
On the food front, the G-8 leaders may announce an aid package or pledging agricultural investment in poorer countries, experts say.
The credit crisis and global market turmoil are sure to be discussed, but with central bankers absent the leaders will most likely avoid saying anything specific about interest rates and currencies. The European Central Bank raised its benchmark interest rate a quarter point Thursday, suggesting it saw inflation as a greater threat than slower growth.
Overall, the summit's main goal will be demonstrating confidence that they can "work through the oil crisis without causing the global economy to melt down," said Tom Cooley, dean of New York University's Stern School of Business.
Given the meeting's emphasis on climate change, the leaders could highlight the links between energy issues and global warming by stressing the importance of energy efficiency and alternative forms of energy, said Hormats of Goldman Sachs.
"The key thing is not what they do at these meetings but what they do at home," he said.
Oil and energy have remained recurring themes at the annual summits, said Hormats, who participated in several of the first meetings, which started in 1975. The initial gathering came after the 1973-74 oil embargo, when fuel prices surged after Middle East oil producers cut off the U.S. and other countries supporting Israel.
"We now have another oil crisis," Hormats said.
The summits were originally meant to focus on economic issues, but the agenda has expanded to include terrorism, Africa's development and the environment.
The group's membership also has grown from six to eight, adding Canada in 1976 and more recently Russia in 1997.
But many argue that it should be expanded to include China, the world's fourth-largest economy, and other emerging powerhouses like India and Brazil — especially to tackle global issues like energy and climate change.
"At what point will the G-8 realize we're no longer the steering committee for the world economy?" said Lael Brainard, a former deputy national economic adviser in the Clinton administration who attended several summits in the 1990s and now is a director at the Brookings Institution, a Washington think tank.
Already, the G-8 has been reaching out. It plans meetings with African leaders on the summit's first day, and later with leaders from China, India, Mexico, Brazil and South Africa — countries that someday might be a part of the Group of 13.
"These countries are critical to the solution of any of these problems," said Brainard. "I believe it's only a matter of time" until the club expands.
___
Associated Press writers Joe Coleman and Shino Yuasa in Tokyo contributed to this report.
Source: http://news.yahoo.com
National Printing Press
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Iron Maiden Tribute Album
Black Tide: Prowler
Metallica : Remember Tomorrow
Avenged Sevenfold: Flash of the blade
Glamour of The Kill: 2 minutes to midnight
Coheed and Cambria: The Troopers
Devil Driver : Wasted Years
Sign: Run to the hills
Dream Theater: To Tame a land
Madina Lake: Caught Somewhere in time
Gallows: : Wrathchild
Fightstar: Fear of the Dark
Machine Head: Hallow be Thy name
Trivium: Iron Maiden
Year Long Disaster: Running Free
Ghostlines: Brave New World
Metallica : Remember Tomorrow
Avenged Sevenfold: Flash of the blade
Glamour of The Kill: 2 minutes to midnight
Coheed and Cambria: The Troopers
Devil Driver : Wasted Years
Sign: Run to the hills
Dream Theater: To Tame a land
Madina Lake: Caught Somewhere in time
Gallows: : Wrathchild
Fightstar: Fear of the Dark
Machine Head: Hallow be Thy name
Trivium: Iron Maiden
Year Long Disaster: Running Free
Ghostlines: Brave New World
Hills Heidi Plans Christian Music
The Hills star's music career takes a new turnThe Hills Heidi never ceases to surprise us!
Ms Montag recently revealed her singing career will take a new direction – she wants to release a Christian album!
We wonder what triggered the decision – might it be her latest single Higher is not fulfilling all expectations?
Heidi – under Spencer’s management – recorded two new songs the last few weeks, but none of them have a Christian theme…
Fashion is about shameless shopping – with some French thrown in, and One More Drink featuring lyrics like ‘Sipping on that happy juice, I’m drinking on that Goose' and ‘I’m getting lost in this liquid high’…
Source: http://www.mtv.co.uk
Photo Credit: http://latimesblogs.latimes.com
NIOS Schools in Bangalore
National Institute of Open Schooling in Bangalore
There are many resource centres in Bangalore that offer coaching to students who take up the syllabus of National Institute of Open Schooling. The list can be had through the Resource Directory published by Banjara Academy, Bangalore. Tel: 23535787, 2353 5766.
There are also some schools who teach NIOS syllabus in regular classes from 8th Standard onwards. Here is the list:
Asha Kiran Special Need School (Integrated School), # 15, 7th Main, Indira Nagar 2nd Stage, Bangalore 560038. Tel: 25258159.
Deepika School (Integrated School), 28th Main, 35th Cross, Jayanagar 4th T Block, Bangalore 560011 Principal: Smt Seetha krishnamurthy, Tel: 26645767
Deepika School (Branch), #2805, 14th B Main, 8-E Cross, Attiguppe, Vijayanagar, Bangalore. Smt. Hema Nataraj Tel: 2339 3222
Poorna School, Opposite DPS Bangalore North, Sathnur Village, Bagalur Post, Jalla Hobli, Bangalore 49. Smt Indira Vijayasimha, Tel: 2279 2042
Parijma Learning Centre, BTS Depot Road, Wilson Garden, Bangalore 27. Ms Archana, Tel: 2223 8534, 2224 3634
Kensri School, Mariya Street, Mariyanna Palya, Bangalore 24, Tel: 2353 3528, 2353 7665
Larkspur House of Learning, # 3/4, Berlie Street Cross, Langford Town, Bangalore. Tel: 2272 7183, 98807 11736
Iyer High School, HMT Main Road, Mathikere, Bangalore 54. Tel; 23372714
Nehru Open School, St John’s Chrch Road, Bangalore 05. Tel: 2546 0531
Spastic Society of karnataka, # 31, 5th Cross, Off 5th Main, Indiranagar 1st Stage, Bangalore 38. Tel: 2528 1831, 2527 4633
Cluny Convent High School, 11th Main, 14th Cross, Malleshwaram, Bangalore 03.
Baldwins Girls High School, Richmond Circle, Bangalore
There may be many other Institutions in Bangalore that are offering NIOS syllabus. Readers may kindly add to the list.
Source: empoweringall.wordpress.com
NIOS Official Website: http://www.nos.org
There are many resource centres in Bangalore that offer coaching to students who take up the syllabus of National Institute of Open Schooling. The list can be had through the Resource Directory published by Banjara Academy, Bangalore. Tel: 23535787, 2353 5766.
There are also some schools who teach NIOS syllabus in regular classes from 8th Standard onwards. Here is the list:
Asha Kiran Special Need School (Integrated School), # 15, 7th Main, Indira Nagar 2nd Stage, Bangalore 560038. Tel: 25258159.
Deepika School (Integrated School), 28th Main, 35th Cross, Jayanagar 4th T Block, Bangalore 560011 Principal: Smt Seetha krishnamurthy, Tel: 26645767
Deepika School (Branch), #2805, 14th B Main, 8-E Cross, Attiguppe, Vijayanagar, Bangalore. Smt. Hema Nataraj Tel: 2339 3222
Poorna School, Opposite DPS Bangalore North, Sathnur Village, Bagalur Post, Jalla Hobli, Bangalore 49. Smt Indira Vijayasimha, Tel: 2279 2042
Parijma Learning Centre, BTS Depot Road, Wilson Garden, Bangalore 27. Ms Archana, Tel: 2223 8534, 2224 3634
Kensri School, Mariya Street, Mariyanna Palya, Bangalore 24, Tel: 2353 3528, 2353 7665
Larkspur House of Learning, # 3/4, Berlie Street Cross, Langford Town, Bangalore. Tel: 2272 7183, 98807 11736
Iyer High School, HMT Main Road, Mathikere, Bangalore 54. Tel; 23372714
Nehru Open School, St John’s Chrch Road, Bangalore 05. Tel: 2546 0531
Spastic Society of karnataka, # 31, 5th Cross, Off 5th Main, Indiranagar 1st Stage, Bangalore 38. Tel: 2528 1831, 2527 4633
Cluny Convent High School, 11th Main, 14th Cross, Malleshwaram, Bangalore 03.
Baldwins Girls High School, Richmond Circle, Bangalore
There may be many other Institutions in Bangalore that are offering NIOS syllabus. Readers may kindly add to the list.
Source: empoweringall.wordpress.com
NIOS Official Website: http://www.nos.org
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