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Do you still get angry??

One day Buddha was walking through a village. A very angry and rude young man came up and began insulting him. “You have no right teaching others,” he shouted. “You are as stupid as everyone else. You are nothing but a fake.”

Buddha was not upset by these insults. Instead he asked the young man “Tell me, if you buy a gift for someone, and that person does not take it, to whom does the gift belong?”
The man was surprised to be asked such a strange question and answered, “It would belong to me, because I bought the gift.”

The Buddha smiled and said, “That is correct. And it is exactly the same with your anger. If you become angry with me and I do not get insulted, then the anger falls back on you. You are then the only one who becomes unhappy, not me. All you have done is hurt yourself.”

“If you want to stop hurting yourself, you must get rid of your anger and become loving instead. When you hate others, you yourself become unhappy. But when you love others, everyone is happy.”
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Yes, I am a Hindu and I'm no different from a Muslim sitting next to me



When Lok Sabha elections are underway, political parties are leaving no stone unturned to assure their victory. Not only political parties but everyone including the media is cashing on the elections to the fullest.
Round the clock there is one or the another election story being aired on television channels and the one common thing in them is the mention of Hindus and Muslims. Say it a shame or an irony but yes in the 21st century we have leaders who talk about people on the basis of religion and community.

This morning I woke up and learnt that a VHP leader has ordered his supporters to evict Muslims from Hindu areas. If I am not mistaken we live in a democracy that follows a Constitution. And that very Constitution empowers us to live where ever we like to. I am a Hindu studying in an University which is, as per law, a minority institution. It's been almost 3 years and I never felt being different from a Muslim boy or girl sitting next to me in my class. No one asked me my religion while sharing my lunchbox or peeping into my answer-sheet during examinations. We have enjoyed each other success and at the same time consoled faliures. To someone of my age it's hardly a point to be Hindu or Muslim but what matters is peace and harmony in society.

When we talk about India Shining and India 2020, these statements are a slap on our progressive thoughts and ideas.
In a country with 125 crore people suffering from illiteracy, inflation and unemployment are religion, caste and social following the main issue, aren't these so called lovers of Mother India supposed to think about the real time problems?

To be honest, we don't want a Hindu or a Muslim but an Indian to prosper, kindly work on this.

Courtesy: Rishabh
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Display Gadgets only in Home Page in Blogger


This article is about how to set up a gadget / widget in Blogger so that it is only visible on the first place that a reader sees when they visit your blog (often called the "home page")

Step 1: Go to “Template” in Dashboard  and choose “Edit Html” Option.

Step 2:    Find the Gadget-Id  by pressing “Ctrl+F” keys and search the gadget name.

Step 3: Find the code for your gadget:
Example:
 <b:section class='main' id='main' showaddelement='no'>
<b:widget id='Text1' locked='false' title='Test gadget' type='Text'/>
<b:widget id='Blog1' locked='true' title='Blog Posts' type='Blog'/>

Step 4: Click on the Expand Widget Templates checkbox (so it's turned on)
After the expanded template, find the widget name again.  This time it will look a bit longer (the exact details depend on what type of widget/gadget it is.)
 <b:section class='main' id='main' showaddelement='no'>
<b:widget id='Text1' locked='false' title='Test gadget' type='Text'>
<b:includable id='main'>
  <!-- only display title if it's non-empty -->
  <b:if cond='data:title != &quot;&quot;'>
  <h2 class='title'><data:title/></h2>
  </b:if>
  <div class='widget-content'>
  <data:content/>
  </div>
<b:include name='quickedit'/>
</b:includable>
</b:widget>
<b:widget id='Blog1' locked='true' title='Blog Posts' type='Blog'>

Step 5:  Add conditional formatting
You need to put conditional formatting code around the code for the gadget - makings sure that it doesn't go around the code for anything else!  (which is why you noted what comes afterwards in step

Copy and pAste this code below this line  <b:includable id='main'>

The code to use is this.  

<b:if cond='data:blog.url == data:blog.homepageUrl'>

and close this code by </b:if>

Thats it Enjoy :)

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Time for India to stand by Russia

It was quite obvious that U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, who was in India this week, was trying hard to ‘persuade’ External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj and the Indian government to take a hard line against Russia in the wake of the Ukraine crisis. It’s for good measure that there is now a government in New Delhi that is actually bothered about Indian national interest and not following an agenda that is being set by Washington.India is one of the biggest barriers in America’s plan to completely isolate Russia. Despite a series of completely baseless accusations levelled over the recent shooting down of the Malaysia Airlines aircraft over Ukrainian airspace, most Asian countries have refused to jump on Washington’s sanction bandwagon.

India says no change in policy towards Russia China is a country that America has realized can never be swayed in its direction. Its size and growing influence give the world’s second largest economy enough confidence to not be bullied by the West, basically making it a lost cause for Washington. India on the other hand is a key for American designs to divide the world into what it classifies as good guys and bad guys. Although Barack Obama initially seemed less confrontational and much more of a dove than his predecessor, he does his Nobel Peace Prize a disservice. American attempts to turn Russia into a pariah would get a major boost if a powerful Asian country like India decided to join the league of vassal states that point fingers at Russia for everything that goes wrong in Ukraine. Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi is a pragmatic man and his practical approach to foreign policy will go a long way in building India’s profile.In the history of independent India, Russia (or the USSR) has never acted against Indian interests, despite what the popular global opinion of the time was. Everyone knows about the 1971 veto that Moscow used in the United Nations Security Council when the Americans and British ignored the genocide of Bangladeshis and were trying to get India declared an aggressor in the war against Pakistan. More members of the UN’s General Assembly were sympathetic to Pakistan than they were to India, as were the so-called non-aligned countries. This did not stop Russia’s unwavering support of India.More recently, when India conducted nuclear tests in the Rajasthan desert, Russia, which was weak and heavily under Western influence, refused to support sanctions against India. It was India’s turn in 1998 to be at the receiving end of American sanctions, something the country resisted so well that the US had to change course. It’s now time for India to declare greater support for Russia and call for a complete and impartial probe into both what’s going on in Eastern Ukraine as well as the tragic shooting of MH 17. I suspect that the Ukrainian authorities and their backers in America may not be very keen to have an independent investigation, especially towards the shooting. We all know that the Ukrainian military shot down a Tel Aviv-Novosibirsk passenger aircraft and lied about it for years!

Indo-Russian cooperation When Narendra Modi met Vladimir Putin last month in Brazil, they spoke about widely expanding trade. The very fact that the West is trying to isolate Russia is a good opportunity for Russian companies to expand their cooperation with both India and Indian companies, especially in infrastructure projects. This is the best time to welcome Russian investment in India and offer tax breaks and preferential agreements for Russian businesses. It would be a winning formula for both countries.There is also some talk about trading in national currencies, but here India and Russia need to exercise a lot of caution. There were a lot of complaints from both sides about the way the old rupee-rouble trade was conducted and things threatened to boil over in the early 1990s over the exact evaluation. It may be better to wait and watch how Russia and China are able to trade in roubles and yuan, before replicating the example in trade with India. Many major economies would like to reduce their dependence on the dollar but this has to be done in a practical and planned manner.China’s overt support for Russia has not led to any serious repercussions from the West, simply because America and its allies are afraid of doing anything that would cause mutual and irreparable damage. The same would apply for India, which is now too big and strategically important to risk ‘losing.’ This is precisely why greater cooperation amongst the BRICS nations is making those trying to protect the existing world order nervous. Greater Indo-Russian engagement and cooperation, both bilaterally and in multilateral setups like the BRICS, is one of the keys to a new global order: one that is not dominated by a war-hungry superpower.

#Reference: Russia £ India Report
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India’s Mars mission - Western Media Reactions

In 2008 when India’s Chandrayaan spacecraft orbited the moon, Fox News ran this headline: “Whoa, where’d they learn to do that!” To the rednecks at the American television channel, it was news that India had aerospace scientists and engineers. It was, therefore, predictable that when they covered India’s successful Mars mission, Fox News’ view was: “It’s also a major feat for the developing country of 1.2 billion people, most of whom are poor.”

The statistics about India’s poverty is a stock phrase that is used with uncanny regularity by western journalists whenever India achieves a significant milestone. The Guardian of England writes: “Some have questioned the $70m price tag for a country still dealing with widespread hunger and poverty.”
The Guardian, in fact, attempts to communalise the event, saying the “Vishwa Hindu Parishad, a hardline affiliate group of (Prime Minister Narendra) Modi’s Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata party, offered ritual prayers in Delhi for the mission. The leader of the group said success would prove that India ‘has regained its status of superpower of the world’.”

Cryogenic countdown: How the GSLV became India’s missile impossible

The British Broadcasting Corp, which doesn't miss any opportunity to highlight India's poverty, pontificates: “Many, however, say this bid to reach Mars is a ‘delusional dream’ of India seeking super-power status since 400 million Indians still live without electricity and 600 million people still do not have access to toilets.” Apparently, the British elites still haven’t got over their post-colonial hangover.

The newswires Reuters headlines its report “India triumphs in maiden Mars mission, sets record in space race” and then offers a parting shot: “Despite its success, India faces criticism for spending on space research as millions go hungry.
In contrast, countries as different as Russia and Pakistan have reported the event dispassionately, and without editorializing.

RT's coverage is textbook journalism – you report what you see without peering through coloured filters. "This is India's first mission into such deep space to search for evidence of life on the Red Planet. But the mission's primary objective is technological – if successful, the country will be joining an elite club of nations: the United States, Russia and Europe," it writes.

The Voice of Russia quotes Russian Academy of Cosmonautics member Andrei Ionin: “For India it is a huge success. This is definitely a gigantic project. India, like many other countries seeks to increase its role in the global technological process and hence pays great importance to space exploration. After all, one of the attributes of a highly technologically advanced super-power is the national space industry.”

In another article, the radio station says: “In the sprint for the Martian marathon, India has shown its technological capability and resilience to undertake arduous inter-planetary journeys.
You see, there was no need to reel off hunger statistics when they are not relevant to the topic. The big news is that India did something incredible and at a jaw-dropping low cost. Also, the photograph of a galaxy of “Rocket Women” clad in colourful silk saris launching into celebrations at the mission control facility in Bangalore was a story in itself. But then, that wouldn’t fit in with the western media’s narrative, which depicts India as a brutal place for women.

Kudankulam Hot topic: Space

One key area in which the western media excels is in constantly referring to any Indian advance in space as part of a tit-for-tat race with China. The Economist, the western mouthpiece, nonchalantly dismisses the event, saying, “Mangalyaan carries few sensors and will discover little of scientific merit.” But it quickly agrees that “to point that out is both petty and beside the point. The main purpose was to get a craft there quickly (ie, before the Chinese) — and cheaply”.

This is plain ridiculous. First up, the Chinese mission was planned a lot earlier but unfortunately became a nonevent when the Russian rocket carrying it failed to place it high enough, causing it to plummet back to earth. Secondly, the Indian mission was launched after the Chinese spacecraft was lost. So how is it a race when nobody was chasing anyone?

In fact, the only race – if at all – was between Mangalyaan and NASA’s Maven, which arrived over Mars just two days the Indian spacecraft. However, the western media never talked about that as a race because to do that would be hyphenating the US with India whereas they would rather club India-China together and project it as an Asian version of the Space Race.

Again, RT puts things squarely in perspective. “Many analysts argue that India is engaged in a space race specifically with China, and that the former’s Mars orbiter was spurred on by the failure of China’s Yinghuo-1 mission to Mars in November 2011.”

“Yet, unlike in the Cold War era, when the USSR and the US engaged in a spectacular tit-for-tat space race while remaining economically and politically estranged from each other, China and India today have a booming trade relationship and are not engaged in any outright ideological confrontation. If there is a “new Cold War” rivalry now, it is more between a whole group of powers led by Russia and the US.”

“There are elements of a Cold War mindset when China and India square off in strategic competition, but it remains embedded within the liberal framework of economic globalization and cooperation. The Chinese Foreign Ministry’s call for “joint efforts” in space exploration after India’s Mars orbiter launch underlines the complexity of this key bilateral relationship in Asia.”

RT also adds considerable value to the coverage, offering this interesting nugget of information: “India is mindful that the strides it’s making in space science can also be a medium for enhancing international cooperation. For instance, its Moon mission in 2008 won the International Cooperation Award from the International Lunar Exploration Working Group for carrying a payload of as many as 20 countries.”

How India’s cryogenic programme was wrecked

Basically, the western media is so predictable in its coverage of India’s successes in the aerospace and defence sectors that you could almost set your watch to it. Space being the next frontier of colonisation, it touches a raw nerve in the West. Having colonised most of the planet in the past 300 years, western nations – especially of English origin – instinctively react with hostility when other nations reach for the final frontier.

Those who argue that India shouldn't embark upon space exploration because it has lots of poor people miss the point entirely. The $1 billion (India’s annual space budget) saved would not be of much help in removing poverty. Plus, India’s space programme has brought huge benefits to Indian farmers, the fishing industry, the telecom sector, disaster management agencies and the military, to name just a few.

Take Cyclone Phailin, which struck both India and the Philippines last year. India, which depended on ISRO’s weather satellites, had casualties in the single digits; in Philippines, which had no such satellites and resorted to mass prayers in churches, over 10,000 people died.

Critics of the Indian space programme need to be told that if the US had waited until there were no poor Americans before sending astronauts to the Moon, then the Apollo rockets would still be sitting on the launch pad. For, there are over 50 million Americans suffering from chronic hunger today.


Courtesy: #Russia & India Report
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Remove Home link and box from Blogger template


In the footer of Blogger template, there is a home page link. Usage of that link is very rare. We can remove this link by a simple template edit. The home link in the footer of blogger template is usually not useful because it is not in a important position. We can change the position of the link or remove that link from the template, if we want.
Previously Google had limits in number of links on a page. Now they lifted this limitation. But the home link is appearing more than once in a page. It is better to avoid duplicate links which are not relevant.
How to remove this link
Go to Template and Edit HTML, Tick on Expand Widget Templates.(#) (#) (#) (#)
Find the following code in the template using Find option.(#)
<a class='home-link' expr:href='data:blog.homepageUrl'><data:homeMsg/></a>
Delete and Save the template and verify the blog.

How to remove the home box
Some blogger templates contain a box with the home link and most of the readers are desperate to delete that too. I suggested to delete the box using some code, But I think it is impossible to delete that box, instead you can hide the box using the CSS trick.
Please find </head> in your template


Add following code just above the head tag.

<style type="text/css">
/* hiding home box link */
#blog-pager{display:none !important;}
</style>

So it will look like this
<style type="text/css">
/* hiding home box link */
#blog-pager{display:none !important;}
</style>
</head>
Save the template, you are done.
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Automatically move Daily Mails to Respective Folders in Outlook

If you subscribe to daily email news letters they can quickly fill up an inbox.  You might want to save them to read or reference at a later time.  Keeping these emails in specific folders is a good way to keep organized.  Today we will take a look at how to create a rule in Outlook to automatically place regularly received email messages in specifically assigned folders.

First right click on the email message you want to move to automatically move to a folder and select Create Rule.

This will open up the Create Rule screen so we can choose the conditions for this email.  Depending upon how you have your mail set up (Exchange, Gmail, etc) will determine what to select for the conditions.  Most of the time I set the rule by sender to one of my email addresses.  Also, you can add visual and sound notifications.  After you have selected the conditions the next thing to click is “Move the item to folder”.

Now browse the folder location you want the email to be sent to or create a new one.
Click OK in the Create Rule window then OK on the following confirmation dialog box.  That’s it, now all daily emails will be sent to a specific folder.


This is just one of many helpful rules you can create in Outlook to stay organized.
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How to Reset Outlook 2010?


I will say a simple method to reset your Outlook 2010 version. I don't know whether it works with other version of Outlook. Please Check it.

Steps:

1. Close Outlook
2. Go to Control Panel and locate the mail icon. (View by Large Icons view)
3. Click show profiles.
4. Delete the profile.
5. Create a new profile (it doesn't matter what you call it.)


After you create a new profile and go into Outlook, it will take you through the wizard again and you can choose what kind of email account you want to setup (pop3, Exchange, etc.)

Hope it helped you :) Kindly contact me if you have any problems with doing in it.
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Best Tamil Album Songs (Part 1)

'

There are few upcoming and best album songs in Tamil and hence we have few best collections with us. Make a Check out by listening to those songs and enjoy :)

Note: The Songs are displayed randomly and not by their rank.

Tamil Album Songs


Namma Ooru Boy Band- Cosmolpolitan Kadhali:


HipHop Tamizha - Vaadi Pulla Vaadi



Muttu Muttu - Teejay



HipHop Tamizha- Club Le Mabbu Le




IFT Prod- Yen Di



Steve Cliff ft. Princeten- Double Game



Vilaaiyaatu Pasanga- Mazhaiye Vaan Mazhaiye


Post your suggestions through contact form and will release the next part soon.
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Dhilip Varman Song Collections


S. Dhilip Varman is a Malaysian singer, lyricist and composer, born and brought up in Penang. Many compare the texture and melody of his vocal range with that of Indian playback singers. His voice won many hearts. Hence i will give few best collections of him.


Collections Of Dhilip Varman


Kanavellam Nee Thane




Yengugiren Ne Pakkam illaiye




Sollamaley




Meendum Meendum




Yetho Oru Paarvaiyil




Uyirai Tholaithen




Kangalil Oru Kathal




Iru Kangal pesum 




Vaanil Vantha Vaanmathi




Mazhaiye Van Mazhaiye



Thank you for watching hope You Enjoyed....
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Show Only Post Title On Home Page In Blogger


Have you tried many methods to Show Only Post Title On Home Page in your blog?

I will say you simple html hack to remove the gadget from your blog. Just follow the simple instructions given below.

Step1: Log in to you Blogger ID

Step2: Go to Dashboard.

Step3: Choose Template.

Step4: Click Edit Html.

Step5: Inside the Code area, press Ctrl+F to open Blogger Search Box.

Step6: Type </head>  inside search box and press enter.

Step 7: Just above </head> add this code:

<style type='text/css'>

<b:if cond='data:blog.url == data:blog.homepageUrl'>

.post {
margin:.5em 0 1.5em;
border-bottom:0px dotted $bordercolor;
padding-bottom:1.0em;
height:50px;
}
.post h3 {
margin:.25em 0 0;
padding:0 0 4px;
font-size:20px;
font-family:Tahoma,Georgia,Century gothic,Arial,sans-serif;
font-weight:normal;
line-height:1.4em;
color:#cc6600;
}

.post h3 a, .post h3 a:visited, .post h3 strong {
display:block;
text-decoration:none;
color:#cc6600;
font-weight:normal;
}

.post h3 strong, .post h3 a:hover {color:#333333;}

.post-body {display:none;}
.post-footer {display:none;}
.comment-link {display:none;}
.post img {display:none;}
.post blockquote {display:none;}
.post blockquote p {display:none;}
h2.date-header {display:none;}
.post-labels {display:none;}
.post-rating {display:none;}

</b:if>

</style>

Step 8: Click Save Template to save the changes you have made.

Thats it you have done :)
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5th Generation Buses by MTC

MTC is the first bus service provider in the world to provide 5th Generation buses for their customer.

Have you ever traveled through 5th generation buses? Two days back I was travelling through MTC bus from my College to Home through bus route 66. I was surprised to see these 5th generation buses from MTC. So you are asking me what is so special in 5th generation buses right? Yep it was so special it was just looking like normal bus from it outer looks. But it will provide the exterior climate inside the bus too. Amazing right? While i was returning it was raining I boarded the bus immediately the bus started and I was surprised to see its raining inside too. While getting out of bus i got completely wet and I was holding by bag some how not to get wet. Its better you take a raincoat with you if you are boarding MTC buses during rain.  






Welded Metals are not even grained properly and which cuts the skin sometimes too. The bus designed such a way that in some buses there is insufficient space to keep our legs properly. Net and Bolts are not covered properly which acts as threat to children. Simply to say worst design and maintenance by MTC. Hope government look in to all issues of MTC Soon.


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Remove Subscribe to : Posts (Atom) Link in your Blog


Have you tried many methods to remove "Subscribe to : Posts (Atom) Link" in your blog?

I will say you simple html hack to remove the gadget from your blog. Just follow the simple instructions given below.

Step1: Log in to you Blogger ID

Step2: Go to Dashboard.

Step3: Choose Template.

Step4: Click Edit Html.

Step5: Inside the Code area, press Ctrl+F to open Blogger Search Box.

Step6: Type <b:include data='feedLinks' name='feedLinksBody'/> inside search box and press enter.

Step 7: Just remove this Command.

Step 8: Click Save Template to save the changes you have made.

Thats it you have done :)
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Remove "Powered by Blogger" in your Blog


Have you tried many methods to remove "Powered by Blogger" in your blog?

I will say you simple html hack to remove the gadget from your blog. Just follow the simple instructions given below.

Step1: Log in to you Blogger ID

Step2: Go to Dashboard.

Step3: Choose Template.

Step4: Click Edit Html.

Step5: Inside the Code area, press Ctrl+F to open Blogger Search Box.

Step6: Type </head>  inside search box and press enter.

Step 7: Just above </head> add this code:

            <style>
            #Attribution1 { 
            display: none;
            }
            </style>

Step 8: Click Save Template to save the changes you have made.

Thats it you have done :)
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Top Tamil Romantic Songs of 2014 (Part 1)

Some of the Best Romantic Songs which touched many hearts of Tamil Cinema by Part 1 of the year 2014.

Note: The songs are listed below are not under rankings. Its just listed randomly.

Anjaan- Kadhal Aasai Yaarai




VIP- Poo Indru Neeyaga


Thegidi- Vinmeen Vithayil



Maan Karate- Un Vizhigalil



Rummy- Koodamela Koodavechu



Vadacurry- Nenjikulle Nee



Cuckoo- Manasula Soora Kathe



Cuckoo- Potta Pulla




Thank You for Watching.. For More Suggestion Inbox Me..