Thursday, October 4, 2007

Money Facts


  • The word millionaire was first used by Benjamin Disraeli in his 1826 novel Vivian Grey.
  • If you stack one million US$1 bills, it would be 110m (361 ft) high and weight exactly 1 ton.
  • A million dollars' worth of $100 bills weighs only 10 kg (22 lb).
  • One million dollars' worth of once-cent coins (100 million coins) weigh 246 tons.
  • TIP is the acronym for "To Insure Promptness."
  • The term "Blue Chip" comes from the colour of the poker chip with the highest value, blue.
  • Nessie, the Loch Ness monster is protected by the 1912 Protection of Animals Acts of Scotland. With good reason - Nessie is worth $40 million annually to Scottish tourism.
  • Of the more than $50 billion worth of diet products sold every year, almost $20 billion are spent on imitation fats and sugar substitutes.
  • Annual global spending on education is $80 billion.
  • US and European expenditure on pet food is $17 billion per year.
  • The global expenditure on healthcare and nutrition is $13 billion.
  • Money notes are not made from paper, it is made mostly from a special blend of cotton and linen.
  • In 1932, when a shortage of cash occurred in Tenino, Washington, USA, notes were made out of wood for a brief period. The wood notes came in $1, $5 and $10 values.
  • The world's largest coins, in size and standard value, were copper plates used in Alaska around 1850. They were about a metre (3 ft) long, half-a-metre (about 2 ft) wide, weighed 40 kg (90 lb), and were worth $2,500.
  • The first credit card was issued by American Express in 1951.
  • About 30% of consumers use their credit card as their main means of buying Christmas goodies, 70% do not save to buy Christmas gifts and 86% of consumers do their Christmas shopping during December.
  • Excessive use of credit is cited as a major cause of non-business b@nkruptcy, second only to unemployment.
  • Statistics show that people with high, medium and low income groups spend about the same amount on Christmas gifts.
  • In the 1400s, global income rose only 0,1% per year; today it often tops 5%.
  • The average age of Forbes's 400 wealthiest individuals is 63.
  • In 1955 the richest woman in the world was Mrs Hetty Green Wilks, who left an estate of $95 million in a will that was found in a tin box with four pieces of soap.
  • In 2001 the richest woman was Liliane Bettencourt, the daughter of L'Oreal's founder. She has a net worth of $14 billion (depending on how the stock market did today).
  • In 2000, Queen Beatrix of the Netherlands is the second wealthiest woman, with $5,2 billion.
  • Queen Elizabeth II is one of the 10th wealthiest women in the world.
  • The $ sign was designed in 1788 by Oliver Pollock.
  • The term "smart money" refers to g@mblers who have inside information or have arranged a fix, the g@mbling term for insuring the outcome of an event by illegal methods.
  • Small-time g@mblers who place small bet in order to prolong the excitement of a game are called "dead fish" by game operators because the longer the playing time, the greater the chances of losing.
  • In g@mbling language, for a g@mbling house a "sure-thing" is a wager that a player has little chance of winning; "easy money" is their profit from an inexperienced bettor, an unlucky player is called a "stiff."
  • Australians are the heaviest g@mblers in the world; an estimated 82% of Australians bet. That is twice as much per capita as Europeans or Americans. Yet, Australia, with less than 1% of the world population, has 20% of the world's poker machines.
  • There are more than 7 million millionaires in the world.
  • 80% of millionaires drive second-hand cars.
  • In 1900, the price of gold was less than $40 per ounce. It reached $600 in 1930, now struggling to reach $400 per ounce.
  • If Los Angeles County was a country, it would be the 19th largest economy in the world.
  • If California was a country, it would be the 5th largest economy in the world.
  • Tobacc0 is a $200 billion industry, producing six trillion cig@rettes a year - about 1,000 cig@rettes for each person on earth.
  • In 1965, CEOs earned on average 44 times more than factory workers. In 1998, CEOs earned on average 326 times more than factory workers and in 1999, they earned 419 times more than factory workers.
  • The income gap between the richest fifth of the world's people and the poorest measured by average national income per head increased from 30 to one in 1960, to 74 to one in 1998.
  • A third of the world's people live on less than $2 a day, with 1,2 billion people living on less than $1 a day.
  • In the 17th century, wool fabrics accounted for about two-thirds of England's foreign trade. Today, the leading wool producers are Australia, New Zealand, Argentina and China.
  • The NASDAQ stock exchange was totally disabled in on day in December 1987 when a squirrel burrowed through a telephone line.
  • In 1990, the word "recession" appeared in 1,583 articles in The Wall Street Journal.
  • Global sales of pre-recorded music total more than $40 billion.
  • Tourism is the world's biggest industry, affecting 240 million jobs.
  • In 1865, Frederik Idestam founded a wood-pulp mill in southern Finland, naming it Nokia. It rapidly gained worldwide recognition, attracting a large number of workforce and the town Nokia was born. In 1898, the Finnish Rubber Works company opened in Nokia, taking on the town name in the 1920s. After WWII, the rubber company took a majority shareholding in the Finnish Cable Work. In 1967, the companies consolidated to become the Nokia Group. The recession of the 1990s led the group to focus on the mobile phone market.

Bill Gates : Facts


Facts - 1995

1. Bill Gates earns US$250 every SECOND, that's about US$20 Million a DAY and US$7.8 Billion a YEAR!

2. If he drops a thousand dollar, he won't even bother to pick it up bcoz the 4 seconds he picks it, he would've already earned it back.

3. The US national debt is about 5.62 trillion, if Bill Gates were to pay the debt by himself; he will finish it in less then 10 years.

4. He can donate US$15 to everyone on earth but still be left with US$5 Million for his pocket money.

5. Michael Jordan is the highest paid athlete in US. If he doesn't drink and eat, and keeps up his annual income i.e. US$30 Million, he'll have to wait for 277 years to become as rich as Bill Gates is now.

6. If Bill Gates was a country, he would be the 37th richest country on earth.

7. If you change all of Bill Gate's money to US$1 notes, you can make a road from earth to moon, 14 times back and forth. But you have to make that road non-stop for 1,400 years, and use a total of 713 BOEING 747 planes to transport all the money.

8. Bill Gates is 40 this year. If we assume that he will live for another 35 years, he has to spend US$6.78 Million per day to finish all his money before he can go to heaven.

Last but not the least: If Microsoft Windows' users can claim US$1 for every time their computers hang because of Microsoft Windows, Bill Gates will be bankrupt in 3 years !!!!!!! !!!!

Facts about Nokia



1) The ringtone "Nokia tune" is actually based on a 19th century guitar work named "Gran Vals" by Spanish musician Francisco Tárrega. The Nokia Tune was originally named "Grande Valse" on Nokia phones but was changed to "Nokia Tune" around 1998 when it became so well known that people referred to it as the "Nokia Tune."

2) The world's first commercial GSM call was made in 1991 in Helsinki over a Nokia-supplied network, by Prime Minister of Finland Harri Holkeri, using a Nokia phone.

3) Nokia is currently the world's largest digital camera manufacturer, as the sales of its camera-equipped mobile phones have exceeded those of any conventional camera manufacturer.

4) The "Special" tone available to users of Nokia phones when receiving SMS (text messages) is actually Morse code for "SMS". Similarly, the "Ascending" SMS tone is Morse code for "Connecting People," Nokia's slogan. The "Standard" SMS tone is Morse code for "M" (Message).

5) The Nokia corporate font (typeface) is the AgfaMonotype Nokia Sans font, originally designed by Eric Spiekermann. Its mobile phone User's Guides Nokia mostly used the Agfa Rotis Sans font.

6) In Asia, the digit 4 never appears in any Nokia handset model number, because 4 is considered unlucky in many parts of Southeast/East Asia.

7) Nokia was listed as the 20th most admirable company worldwide in Fortune's list of 2006 (1st in network communications, 4th non-US company).

8. Unlike other modern day handsets, Nokia phones do not automatically start the call timer when the call is connected, but start it when the call is initiated. (Except for Series 60 based handsets like the Nokia 6600)

9) Nokia is sometimes called aikon (Nokia backwards) by non-Nokia mobile phone users and by mobile software developers, because "aikon" is used in various SDK software packages, including Nokia's own Symbian S60 SDK.

10) The name of the town of Nokia originated from the river which flowed through the town. The river itself, Nokianvirta, was named after the old Finnish word originally meaning sable, later pine marten.

Mind Blowing Facts

1. Turtles have no teeth.


2. Prehistoric turtles may have weighed as much as 5,000 pounds.


3. Only one out of a thousand baby sea turtles survives after hatching.


4. Sea turtles absorb a lot of salt from the sea water in which they live. They excrete excess salt from their eyes, so it often looks as though they're crying.


5. Helium is a colourless, odourless, tasteless inert gas at room temperature and makes up about 0.0005% of the air we breathe.


6. Helium Balloon Gas makes balloons float. Helium is lighter than air and just as the heaviest things will tend to fall to the bottom, the lightest things will rise to the top.


7. Helium Balloon Gas makes balloons float. Helium is lighter than air and just as the heaviest things will tend to fall to the bottom, the lightest things will rise to the top.


8. Camels can spit.


9. An ostrich can run 43 miles per hour (70 kilometers per hour).


10. Pigs are the fourth most intelligent animal in the world.


11. Dinosaurs didn't eat grass? There was no grass in the days of the dinosaurs.


12. Dolphins can swim 37 miles per hour (60 kilometers per hour).


13. A crocodile's tongue is attached to the roof of its mouth? It cannot move. It cannot chew but its Digestive juices are so strong that it can digest a steel nail, Glass pieces, etc


14. Sharks are immune to disease i.e they do not suffer from any Disease.


15. Animals are either right- or left-handed? Polar bears are always left-handed, and so is Kermit the Frog.


16. Paris, France has more dogs than people.


17. New Zealand is home to 70 million sheep and only 40 million people.


18. Male polar bears weigh 1400 pounds and females only weight 550 pounds, on average.


19. Bison are excellent swimmers? Their head, hump and tail never go below the surface of the water.


20. There are 6 to 14 frogs species in the world that have no tongues. One of these is the African dwarf frog.


21. A frog named Santjie, who was in a frog derby in South Africa jumped 33 feet 5.5 inches.


22. The longest life span of a frog was 40 years


23. The eyes of a frog flatten down when it swallows its prey


24. The name `India' is derived from the River Indus


25. The Persian invaders converted it into Hindu. The name `Hindustan' combines Sindhu and Hindu and thus refers to the land of the Hindus.


26. Chess was invented in India.


27. The' place value system' and the 'decimal system' were developed in 100 BC in India.


28. The game of snakes & ladders was created by the 13th century poet saint Gyandev. It was originally called 'Mokshapat.' The ladders in the game represented virtues and the snakes indicated vices.


29. India has the most post offices in the world


30. 'Navigation' is derived from the Sanskrit word NAVGATIH


31. The word navy is also derived from the Sanskrit word 'Nou'.


32. Until 1896, India was the only source for diamonds to the world


33. The' place value system' and the 'decimal system' were developed in 100 BC in India.


34. A snail can sleep for 3 years.


35. The names of the continents all end with the same letter with which they start


36. Twenty-Four-Karat Gold is not pure gold since there is a small amount of copper in it. Absolutely pure gold is so soft that it can be molded with the hands.


37. Electricity doesn't move through a wire but through a field around the wire.


38. The first bicycle that was made in 1817 by Baron von Drais didn't have any pedals? People walked it along


39. The first steam powered train was invented by Robert Stephenson. It was called the Rocket.


40. A cheetah does not roar like a lion - it purrs like a cat (meow).


41. The original name for the butterfly was 'flutterby'


42. An ostrich's eye is bigger than its brain.


43. Ants don't sleep.


44. Dolphins usually live up to about twenty years, but have been known to live for about forty.


45. Dolphins sleep in a semi-alert state by resting one side of their brain at a time


46. A dolphin can hold its breath for 5 to 8 minutes at a time


47. Bats can detect warmth of an animal from about 16 cm away using its "nose-leaf".


48. Bats can also find food up to 18 ft. away and get information about the type of insect using their sense of echolocation.


49. The eyes of the chameleon can move independently & can see in two different directions at the same time.


50. Cockroach: Can detect movement as small as 2,000 times the diameter of a hydrogen atom.


51. Dragonfly: Eye contains 30,000 lenses.


52. Pig's Tongue contains 15,000 taste buds. For comparison, the human tongue has 9,000 taste buds.


53. The number system was invented by India. Aryabhatta was the scientist who invented the digit zero.


54. Intelligent people have more zinc and copper in their hair.


55. Earth weighs 5,972,000,000,000,000,000,000 tons


56. Like fingerprints, everyone's tongue print is different.


57. A duck's quack doesn't echo anywhere


58. Man is the only animal who'll eat with an enemy


59. The average woman uses about her height in lipstick every five years.


60. The first Christmas was celebrated on December 25,


61. AD 336 in Rome.


62. A Cockroach will live nine days without its head, before it starves to death.


63. A chimpanzee can learn to recognize itself in a mirror, but monkeys can't


64. A rat can last longer without water than a camel can


65. About 10% of the world's population is left-handed


66. Dolphins sleep with one eye open


67. Snakes have no external ears. Therefore, they do not hear the music of a "snake charmer". Instead, they are probably responding to the movements of the snake charmer and the flute. However, sound waves may travel through bones in their heads to the middle ear.


68. Many spiders have eight eyes.


69. The tongue of snakes has no taste buds. Instead, the tongue is used to bring smells and tastes into the mouth. Smells and tastes are then detected in two pits, called "Jacobson's organs", on the roof of their mouths. Receptors in the pits then transmit smell and taste information to the brain.


70. Birds don't sweat


71. The highest kangaroo leap recorded is 10 ft and the longest is 42 ft


72. Flamingo tongues were eaten common at Roman feasts


73. The smallest bird in the world is the Hummingbird. It weighs 1oz


74. The bird that can fly the fastest is called a White it can fly up to 95 miles per hour.


75. The oldest living thing on earth is 12,000 years old. It is the flowering shrubs called creosote bushes in the Mojave Desert


76. Tea is said to have been discovered in 2737 BC by a Chinese emperor when some tea leaves accidentally blew into a pot of boiling water.


77. A person can live without food for about a month, but only about a week without water.


If the amount of water in your body is reduced by just 1%, you'll feel thirsty.


If it's reduced by 10%, you'll die.


78. Along with its length neck, the giraffe has a very long tongue -- more than a foot and a half long. A giraffe can clean its ears with its 21-inch tongue


79. Ostriches can kick with tremendous force, but only forward. Don't Mess with them


80. An elephant can smell water three miles away


81. If you were to remove your skin, it would weigh as much as 5 pounds


82. A hippopotamus can run faster than a man


83. India never invaded any country in her last 10000 years of history


84. The world's known tallest man is Robert Pershing Wadlow. The giraffe is 5.49m (18 ft.), the man is 2.55m (8ft. 11.1 in.).


85. The world's tallest woman is Sandy Allen. She is 2.35m (7 ft. 7 in.).


86. The only 2 animals that can see behind itself without turning its head are the rabbit and the parrot.


87. The blue whale is the largest animal on earth. The heart of a blue whale is as big as a car, and its tongue is as long as an elephant.


88. The largest bird egg in the world today is that of the ostrich. Ostrich eggs are from 6 to 8 inches long. Because of their size and the thickness of their shells, they take 40 minutes to hard-boil. The average adult male ostrich, the world's largest living bird, weighs up to 345 pounds.


89. Every dolphin has its own signature whistle to distinguish it from other dolphins, much like a human fingerprint


90. The world's largest mammal, the blue whale, weighs 50 tons i.e. 50000 Kg at birth. Fully grown, it weighs as much as 150 tons i.e. 150000 Kg.


91. 90 % of all the ice in the world in on Antarctica


92. Antarctica is DRIEST continent. Antarctica is a desert


93. Antarctica is COLDEST continent, averaging minus 76 degrees in the winter


94. Mercury is the closest planet to the sun and it doesn't have a moon. Its atmosphere is so thin that during the day the temperature reaches 750 degrees, but at night it gets down to -300 degrees.


95. Jupiter is the largest planet. If Jupiter were hollow, you could fit 1000 earths inside! It is made up of gas and is not solid. The most famous feature on Jupiter is its Red Spot, which is actually an enormous hurricane that has been raging on Jupiter for hundreds of years! Sixteen moons orbit Jupiter.


96. Saturn is a very windy place! Winds can reach up to 1,100 miles per hour. Saturn is also made of gas. If you could find an ocean large enough, it would float. This planet is famous for its beautiful rings, and has at least 18 moons.


97. Uranus is the third largest planet, and is also made of gas. It's tilted on its side and spins north-south rather than east-west. Uranus has 15 moons.


98. Neptune takes 165 Earth years to get around the sun. It appears blue because it is made of methane gas. Neptune also has a big Spot like Jupiter. Winds on Neptune get up to 1,200 mile per hour! Neptune has 8 moons.


99. Pluto is the farthest planet from the sun... usually. It has such an unusual orbit that it is occasionally closer to the sun than Neptune. Pluto is made of rock and ice.


100. Just about everyone listens to the radio! 99% of homes in the United States have a least one radio. Most families have several radios.


101. Sound is sent from the radio station through the air to your radio by means of electromagnetic waves. News, music, Bible teaching, baseball games, plays, advertisements- these sounds are all converted into electromagnetic waves (radio waves) before they reach your radio and your ears.


102. At the radio station, the announcer speaks into a microphone. The microphone changes the sound of his voice into an electrical signal. This signal is weak and can't travel very far, so it's sent to a transmitter. The transmitter mixes the signal with some strong radio signals called carrier waves. These waves are then sent out through a special antenna at the speed of light! They reach the antenna of your radio. Your antenna "catches" the signal, and the radio's amplifier strengthens the signal and sends it to the speakers. The speakers vibrate, and your ears pick up the vibrations and your brain translates them into the voice of the radio announcer back at the station. When you consider all the places the announcer's voice travels


103. Every radio station has its own frequency. When you turn the tuning knob on your radio, you are choosing which frequency you want your antenna to "catch."


104. Mountain lions are known by more than 100 names, including panther, catamount, cougar, painter and puma. It's scientific name is Felis concolor, which means "cat of one color." At one time, mountain lions were very common!


105. The large cats of the world are divided into two groups- those that roar, like tigers and African lions, and those that purr. Mountain lions purr, hiss, scream, and snarl, but they cannot roar.


106. They can jump a distance of 30 feet, and jump as high as 15 feet. It would take quite a fence to keep a mountain lion out!


107. Their favorite food is deer, but they'll eat other critters as well. They hunt alone, not in packs like wolves. They sneak up on their prey just like a house cat sneaks up on a bird or toy- one slow step at a time. A lion can eat ten pounds of meat at one time! That's equivalent to 40 quarter-pounder hamburgers!


108. Queen ants can live to be 30 years old


109. Dragonflies can flap their wings 28 times per second and they can fly up to 60 miles per hour


110. As fast as dragonflies can flap their wings, bees are even faster... they can flap their wings 435 times per second


111. Human thigh bones are stronger than concrete.


112. You can't kill yourself by holding your breath


113. Your heart beats over 100,000 times a day


114. Right handed people live, on average, nine years longer than left-handed people


115. The elephant is the only mammal that can't jump!


116. Fingernails grow nearly 4 times faster than toenails!


117. Women blink nearly twice as much as men


118. Honey is the only food that does not spoil. Honey found in the tombs of Egyptian pharaohs has been tasted by archaeologists and found edible


119. Coca-Cola would be green if colouring weren't added to it.


120. More people are allergic to cow's milk than any other food.


121. Camels have three eyelids to protect themselves from blowing sand


122. Earth is the only planet not named after a god.


123. It's against the law to burp, or sneeze in a church in Nebraska, USA.


124. Some worms will eat themselves if they can't find any food!


125. It is impossible to sneeze with your eyes open


126. Queen Elizabeth I regarded herself as a paragon of cleanliness. She declared that she bathed once every three months, whether she needed it or not


127. Slugs have 4 noses.


128. Owls are the only birds who can see the colour blue.


129. Your tongue is the only muscle in your body that is attached at only one end


130. More than 1,000 different languages are spoken on the continent of Africa.


131. There was once an undersea post office in the Bahamas.


132. Abraham Lincoln's mother died when she drank the milk of a cow that grazed on poisonous snakeroot


133. After the death of Albert Einstein his brain was removed by a pathologist and put in a jar for future study.


134. Penguins are not found in the North Pole


135. A dentist invented the Electric Chair.


136. A whip makes a cracking sound because its tip moves faster than the speed of sound


137. Alexander Graham Bell's wife and mother were both deaf


138. Cockroaches break wind every 15 minutes.


139. Fish scales are an ingredient in most lipsticks


140. Canada" is an Indian word meaning "Big Village".


141. 259200 people die every day.


142. 11% of the world is left-handed


143. 1.7 litres of saliva is produced each day


144. The worlds oldest piece of chewing gum is 9000 years old!


145. The largest beetle in the Americas is the Hercules beetle, which can be 4 to 6 inches in length. That's bigger than your hand!


146. A full-grown male mountain lion may be 9 feet long, including his tail!


147. There are two kinds of radio stations: AM and FM. That's why there are two dials on your radio. AM is used mostly for stations that specialize in talking, such as Christian stations that have Bible stories and sermons; sports stations that broadcast live baseball and football games; and stations that specialize in news programs and "talk shows," where listeners call the station and discuss various topics. FM is used mostly for stations that specialize in music.


148. The average lead pencil can draw a line that is almost 35 miles long or you can write almost 50,000 words in English with just one pencil


149. The Wright Brothers invented one of the first airplanes. It was called the Kitty Hawk.


150. The worst industrial disaster in India, occurred in 1984 in Bhopal the capital of Madhya Pradesh. A deadly chemical, methly isocyanate leaked out of the Union Carbide factory killing more than 2500 and leaving thousands sick. In fact the effects of this gas tragedy is being felt even today.


151. Mars is nicknamed the "Red Planet," because it looks reddish in the night sky. Mars has 2 moons.


152. Venus is nicknamed the "Jewel of the Sky." Because of the greenhouse effect, it is hotter than Mercury, even though it's not as close to the sun. Venus does not have a moon but it does have clouds of sulfuric acid! If you're gonna visit Venus, pack your gas mask!


153. Tens of thousands of participants come from all over the world, fight in a harmless battle where more than one hundred metric tons of over-ripe tomatoes are thrown in the streets.

Facts About Your Planet

  • In 1783 an Icelandic eruption threw up enough dust to temporarily block out the sun over Europe.
  • About 20 to 30 volcanoes erupt each year, mostly under the sea.
  • A huge underground river runs underneath the Nile, with six times more water than the river above.
  • Lake Bosumtwi in Ghana formed in a hollow made by a meteorite.
  • Beaver Lake, in Yellowstone Park , USA, was artificially created by beaver damming.
  • Off the coast of Florida there is an underwater hotel. Guests have to dive to the entrance.
  • Venice in Italy is built on 118 sea islets joined by 400 bridges. It is gradually sinking into the water.
  • The Ancient Egyptians worshipped a sky goddess called Nut.
  • The world's windiest place is Commonwealth Bay, Antartica.
  • In 1934, a gust of wind reached 371 km/h on Mount Washington in New Hampshire, USA.
  • American Roy Sullivan has been struck by lighting a record seven times.
  • The desert baobab tree can store up to 1000 litres of water in its trunk.
  • The oldest living tree is a California bristlecone pine name 'Methuselah' . It is about 4600 years old. The largest tree in the world is a giant sequoia growing in California. It is 84 meters tall and measures 29 meters round the trunk. The fastest growing tree is the eucalyptus. It can grow 10 meters a year.
  • The Antartic notothenia fish has a protein in its blood that acts like antifreeze and stops the fish freezing in icy sea.
  • The USA uses 29% of the world's petrol and 33% of the world's electricity.
  • The industrial complex of Cubatao in Brazil is known as the Valley of Death because its pollution has destroyed the trees and rivers nearby.
  • Tibet is the highest country in the world. Its average height above sea level is 4500 meters.
  • Some of the oldest mountains in the world are the Highlands in Scotland. They are estimated to be about 400 million years old.
  • Fresh water from the River Amazon can be found up to 180 km out to sea.
  • The White Sea, in Russia, has the lowest temperature, only -2 degrees centigrade. The Persian Gulf is the warmest sea. In the summer its temperature reaches 35.6 degrees centigrade.
  • There is no land at all at the North Pole, only ice on top of sea. The Arctic Ocean has about 12 million sq km of floating ice and has the coldest winter temperature of -34 degrees centigrade.
  • The Antarctic ice sheet is 3-4 km thick, covers 13 million sq km and has temperatures as low as -70 degrees centigrade.
  • Over 4 million cars in Brazil are now running on gasohol instead of petrol. Gasohol is a fuel made from sugar cane.

Cows Facts

Cows don't have upper front teeth




Although a cow has no upper front teeth, it grazes up to 8 hours a day, taking in about 45 kg (100 lb) of feed and the equivalent of a bath tub full of water. A healthy cow gives about 200,000 glasses of milk in her lifetime.
A cow has four stomachs: the rumen, reticulum, omasum and abomasum. The rumen is the largest stomach and acts as a fermentation chamber. The abomasum is last of the four and is comparable in both structure and function to the human stomach.
With all its grazing and many stomachs, it is no wonder that cows are one of the main contributors to the hole in the ozone layer. Apart from CFC, the biggest culprit is hydrocarbon emissions from cars and cows. Yes, cows! Cows release some 100 million tons of hydrocarbon annually - by releasing gas. To give you an idea of how much gas a cow emits: if the gas of 10 cows could be captured, it would provide heating for a small house for a year.
But unlike what you think, cows release hydrocarbon mostly by burping.

Six Ways to make People Like You

i like you [www.ritemail.blogspot.com]

Principle 1: Become genuinely interested in other people.


A simple way to make a good impression.

The expression one wears on one's face if far more important than the clothes one wears on one's back. Actions speak louder than words, and a smile says, " I like you. You make me happy. I am glad to see you." You must have a good time meeting people i f you expect them to have a good time meeting you. You don't feel like smiling? Then what? Two things. First, force yourself to smile. If you are alone, force yourself to whistle or hum a tune or sing. Act as if you were already happy, and that will tend to make you happy. "Action seems to follow feeling, but really action and feeling go together; and by regulating the action, which is under the more direct control of the will, we can indirectly regulate the feeling, which is not." -William James. Happiness doesn't depend on outward conditions. It depends on inner conditions. It isn't what you have or who you are or where you are or what you are doing that makes you happy or unhappy. It is what you think about it. "There is nothing either good or bad," said Shakespeare, "but thinking makes it so." Your smile is a messenger of your good will. Your smile brightens the lives of all who see it. To someone who has seen a dozen people frown, scowl or turn their faces away, your smile is like the sun breaking through the clouds.

Principle 2: Smile.

If you don't do this, you are headed for trouble
The average person is more interested in his or her own name than all the other names on earth put together. Remember that name and call it easily, and you have paid a subtle and very effective compliment. But forget it or misspell it-and you have plac e yourself at a sharp disadvantage. Whenever you meet a new acquaintance, find out his or her complete name and some facts about his or her family, business or political opinions. Fix all these facts well in mind as part of the picture, and the next time you meet that person, even if it was a year later, you will be able to shake hands, inquire after the family, and ask about the hollyhocks in the backyard. Sometimes it is difficult to remember a name, particularly if it is hard to pronounce. Rather than even try to learn it, many people ignore it or call the person by an easy nickname. Most people don't remember names, for the simple reason that they don't take the time and energy necessary to concentrate and repeat and fix names indelibly in their minds. If you don't hear the name distinctly say excuse me I didn't get your name clearly. Then, if it is an unusual name, ask how it is spelled. Use the person's name several times in the conversation; try to associate it in your mind with the person's featur es, expression and general appearance. Then, when you are alone write the name down on a piece of paper, look at it, and concentrate on it, fix it securely in your mind, in this way you will gain an eye impression of the name as well as an ear impression.

Principle 3: Remember that a person's name is to that person the sweetest and most important sound in any language.

An easy way to become a good conversationalist
Listen intently; listen because you are genuinely interested. That kind of listening is one of the highest compliments we can pay anyone. The chronic kicker, even the most violent critic, will frequently soften and be subdued in the presence of a patient, sympathetic listener-a listener who will be silent with the irate fault-finger dilates like a king cobra and spews the poison out of his system. Be more eager to hear what a person has to say then even they are to tell it. Many people prefer good list eners to good talkers, but the ability to listen seems rarer than almost any other good trait. All we want when we are in trouble is a friendly, sympathetic listener to unburden yourself. That is frequently all the irritated customer wants, and the dissat isfied employee or the hurt friend. If you want to know how to make people shun you and laugh at you behind your back and even despise you, here is the recipe: Never listen to anyone for long. Talk incessantly about yourself. If you have an idea while the other person is talking, don't wait for him or her to finish: bust right in and interrupt in the middle of a sentence. If you aspire to be a good conversationalist, be an attentive listener. To be interesting, be interested. Ask questions that other persons will enjoy answering. Encourage them to talk about themselves and their accomplishments.

Principle 4: Be a good listener. Encourage others to talk about themselves.

How to interest people
The royal road to a person's heart is to talk about the things he or she treasures most. Make an effort to find out what interests the person then get them talking about it. Talking in terms of the other person's interests pays off for both parties. When asked what reward he got from it, Mr. Herzig responded that he not only received a different reward from each person but that in general the reward had been an enlargement of his life each time he spoke to someone.

Principle 5: Talk in terms of the other person's interests.

How to make people like you instantly.

Ask yourself " What is there about him or her that I can honestly admire?" That is sometimes a hard question to answer, especially with strangers. You want approval of those with whom you come in contact. You want recognition of your true worth. You want a feeling that your are important in our little world. You don't want to listen to cheap, insincere flattery, but you do crave sincere appreciation. So let's obey the Golden Rule, and give unto others what we would have others give unto us. How? When? Where? The answer is all the time, everywhere. Use little phrases such as "I'm sorry to trouble you, ___." "Would you please ___?" "Won't you please?" "Would you mind?" "Thank you." The unvarnished truth is that almost all the people you meet feel themselves superior to you in some way, and a sure way to their hearts is to let them realize in some subtle way that you recognize their importance, and recognize it sincerely. Talk to people about themselves and they will listen for hours.

Principle 6: Make the other person feel important-and do it sincerely.

In a Nutshell: Six ways to make people like you Become genuinely interested in other people.

Smile.
Remember that a person's name is to that person the sweetest and most important sound in any language.
Be a good listener. Encourage others to talk about themselves.
Talk in terms of the other person's interests.
Make the other person feel important-and do it sincerely.

Biggest {www.ritemail.blogspot.com}

10 Little Things

10 Little Things you can do for the Environment

1. Use a glass when brushing your teeth. Every year, billions of liters of fresh water is wasted by simply not using a glass when brushing your teeth.

.
2. Don’t use straws. They say the straw is the most stupid invention. They are unnecessary and only add to our waste problem.

.
3. Say NO to plastics when shopping. Bring your own reusable bags when doing your grocery, or when buying single items like books or cd’s, a plastic bag, or even a paper bag is unnecessary.

.
4. Turn off the lights. When there is ample daylight or when no one is in the room. You not only save on electricity, you also lower temperature as light gives off heat.

.
5. Walk. Take the stairs. Or car pool or take public transportation. You not only lower your carbon gas emissions, you are also doing your heart good when you walk regularly.

.
6. Unplug cell phone chargers after use. As well as all unused electronic appliances. Some appliances use more electricity even when not in use. Microwave oven with timers uses more electricity on stand by mode the entire day than when you cook dinner with it.

.
7. Use both sides of the paper. And make sure to recycle it after. You not only lessen your wastes but you also help stop the unnecessary cutting of more trees.

.
8. Turn off shower when soaping. And make sure to avoid long and frequent showers. Showering three times a day not only uses precious fresh water, but also creates more waste water that goes into our rivers and lakes. It dries your skin too.

.
9. Never burn anything. Burned resources are lost forever. Burning also releases harmful substances into the atmosphere. Reduce and reuse always. Compost and recycle what you can.

.
10. Tell your friends about this. Spread the word, and together we can make a difference.

Interesting facts

Here are some interesting, but true facts, that you may or may not have known.

  1. The Statue of Liberty's index finger is eight feet long.
  2. Rain has never been recorded in some parts of the Atacama Desert in Chile.
  3. A 75 year old person will have slept about 23 years.
  4. A Boeing 747's wing span is longer than the Wright brother's first flight.(the Wright brother's invented the airplane)
  5. There are as many chickens on earth as there are humans.
  6. One type of hummingbird weighs less than a penny.
  7. The word "set " has the most number of definitions in the English language;192
  8. Slugs have four noses.
  9. Sharks can live up to 100 years .
  10. Mosquitos are more attracted to the color blue than any other color.
  11. Kangaroos can't walk backwards.
  12. About 75 acres of pizza are eaten in in the U.S. Everyday.
  13. The largest recorded snowflake was 15in wide and 8in thick. It fell in Montana in 1887.
  14. The tip of a bullwhip moves so fast that the sound it makes is actually a tiny sonic boom.
  15. Former president Bill Clinton only sent 2 emails in his entire 8 year presidency .
  16. Koalas and humans are the only animals that have finger prints.
  17. There are 200,000,000 insects for every one human.
  18. It takes more calories to eat a piece of celery than the celery had in it to begin with.
  19. The world's largest Montessori school is in India, with 26,312 students in 2002 .
  20. Octopus have three hearts.
  21. If you ate too many carrots, you'd turn orange.
  22. The average person spends two weeks waiting for a traffic light to change.
  23. 1 in 2,000,000,000 people will live to be 116 or old.
  24. The body has 2-3 million sweat glands.
  25. Sperm whales have the biggest brains; 20 lbs.
  26. Tiger shark embroyos fight each other in their mother's womb. The survivor is born.
  27. Most cats are left pawed.
  28. 250 people have fallen off the Leaning Tower of Pisa.
  29. A Blue whale's tongue weighs more than an elephant.
  30. You use 14 muscles to smile and 43 to frown. Keep Smiling!.
  31. Bamboo can grow up to 3 ft in 24 hours.
  32. An eyeball weighs about 1 ounce.
  33. Bone is five times stronger than steel.

Visit---- www.re-noir.blogspot.com

To get lots wonderful stuffs....FOR U!!!! HAVE FUN

0 comments:

Post a Comment