Wednesday, 31 January 2018

The Unbelievable Invention in 1996...


The water fuel cell is a technical design of a "perpetual motion machine" created by American Stanley Allen Meyer (August 241940 – March 20, 1998). Meyer claimed that an automobile retrofitted with the device could use water as fuel instead of gasoline. Meyer's claims about his "Water Fuel Cell" and the car that it powered were found to be fraudulent by an Ohio court in 1996.






















  • Stanley Meyer (Stanley Allen Meyer) was born August 24, 1940, and was one of two twin boys. His twin brother is Stephen Meyer.

Meyer was born and lived on Columbus' East Side before moving to Grandview Heights, where he finished high school. He briefly attended Ohio State University and joined the military.
"We were always building something," Stephen Meyer recalled of their youth. "We went out and created our toys."

At 6 feet 3 and with a booming voice, Stanley Meyer was charismatic and persuasive, equally conversant with physicists and bricklayers.
He was also eccentric. His favorite phrase was "Praise the Lord and pass the ammunition," friends said.

He once called Grove City police to his home and laboratory on Broadway to report a suspicious package. The Columbus bomb squad detonated the parcel, only to discover it was equipment that he had ordered.

  • Employment & Business...
Meyer worked for the Battelle Foundation in Ohio. He also worked on the development of the Gemini project with NASA, and also worked on the feeding system for energy on "concept EBED" for the Star Wars project.

With his brother Stephen Meyer, former engineer in electricity of USAF, Meyer assembled an operation worth several million dollars in the field of transport and spare parts.
  • Achievements...
Stanley Meyer was very entrepreneurial and always financed his own scientific work.

Meyer was recognized and rewarded by national and international organizations, and was elected inventor of the year in "Who's Who of America" in 1993. Meyer also received substantial support from Canada, England, and Sweden.
  • "Water Fuel Cell" Technology...
His focus on water as fuel began in 1975, a year after the end of the Arab oil embargo, which had triggered high gas prices, gas-pump lines and anxiety.


"It became imperative that we must try to bring in an alternative fuel source and do it very quickly," Meyer says in his documentary.

This led to Meyer developing what he patented as the "water fuel cell".
Meyer claimed that an automobile retrofitted with the device could use water as fuel instead of gasoline.

The water fuel cell purportedly split water into its component elements, hydrogen and oxygen. The hydrogen was then burned to generate energy, a process that reconstituted the water molecules.

According to Meyer, the device required less energy to perform electrolysis than the minimum energy requirement predicted or measured by conventional science.
Eye-witness accounts suggest that US inventor Stanley Meyer had developed an electric cell which split ordinary tap water into hydrogen and oxygen with far less energy than that required by a normal electrolytic cell.

Meyer made a demonstration before Professor Michael Laughton, Dean of Engineering at Mary College, London, Admiral Sir Anthony Griffin, a former controller of the British Navy, and Dr Keith Hindley, a UK research chemist.
They all agreed that Meyer's cell, developed at the inventor's home in Grove City Ohio, produced far more hydrogen/oxygen mixture than could have been expected by simple electrolysis.

Stanley Meyer claimed that his invention could do what physicists say is impossible -- turn water into hydrogen fuel efficiently enough to drive his dune buggy cross-country on 20 gallons straight from the tap.

Meyer had euphoric highs and humiliating defeats. He was kind and generous yet paranoid and suspicious.

He would be hailed as a visionary and a genius. He also would be sued and declared a fraud.


Exclusive News Interview 

  • Legal Hurdles...
Meyer attracted believers, investors - and eventually, legal trouble.
William E. Brooks from Anchorage, Alaska invested more than $300,000 in Meyer's technology. He hoped to find applications for his aviation business.

Today, he and his wife, Lorraine, laugh about the ordeal, made easier because their money was returned in a 1994 settlement in Franklin County Common Pleas Court.

Two years later, a Fayette County judge found "gross and egregious fraud" in Meyer's contract negotiation with two businessmen. Their money was returned.

Roger L. Hurley, a retired Darke County judge, defended Meyer and still believes in him.
"I would not represent someone who I would consider to be a shyster or a bum," said Hurley. "He was a nice guy."



Sunday, 28 January 2018

THIS MESSEGE FOR SMOKER AND DRUNKER

Hi i want share my thoughts to you...


Smoke panrathu ungaluthu virupam but athu unga health ku mattum problem create panrathila antha smoke yarelam smell panrangalo avangukutha athigama danger.

Drink panravanga avanga personal reason ku drink panranga but inkey intha city la nadakura athana crime kum drink and drunkers tha karanam.

Sex... Avanga santhosathukandi sila thapana palakkathuku addict aagi thapana girls moolama sila pala diciese ku poiranga but athanala avanga mattuma suffer aguranga never sila deciese spread aaga kudiyathu, apdi patta diciese HIV pondrathu avangala sernthavangala mattumilama entha thapum panatha girls and boys um pathipulakuthu apdi pathika pattavanga intha society la othuka pattu valuranga.

Please Friends read and realise your mistakes, unga santhosathukandi nanga saaga mudiathu please and thanks

Saturday, 27 January 2018

All Chinese apps Banned By Indian Govt.

Truecaller, Shareit, UC Browser and other Chinese apps banned for India's armed forces



Popular Chinese apps like Truecaller, Shareit, WeChat, Weibo, and others have invited the wrath of the Indian government as political tensions between both countries escalate. An advisory issued by the Home Ministry has reportedly warned all defense personnel of a potential cyber attack from Chinese hackers. The armed forces have been ordered to uninstall 42 Chinese apps from their mobile phones, according to reports. These are some of the most popular social messaging and communication apps.
The ban comes to effect immediately. All officers have been told to format both their official and personal smartphones. “According to reliable inputs, a number of Android/IOS apps developed by Chinese firms or having Chinese links are reportedly either spyware or other malicious ware. Use of these apps by our personnel can be detrimental to… national security,” the advisory issued on November 24 stated.
The Home Ministry has issued an advisory warning of a possible cyber attack from Chinese hackers.
The ban also includes a bunch of apps owned by Alibaba (UC News, UC Browser) and Xiaomi (Mi Store, Mi Community, Mi Video Call), as well as popular ones like Viva Video, Beauty Plus, CM Browser, Clean Master, QQ Launcher, BaiduTranslate, Baidu Maps, Parallel Space and more. UC, incidentally, has over 500 million users in India, and is the most popular mobile browser ahead of even Google Chrome. The advisory, however, doesn’t shed any light on how these apps would pose a threat to the country’s security.

Back in 2015, the Defense Ministry had blocked internet access and stopped the use of Wi-Fi and Bluetooth-enabled devices in elite political circles on apprehensions of attacks from Chinese hackers. That same year, a Singapore-based cyber security firm had uncovered a Chinese cyber espionage network targeting the Indian armed forces with a bug called APT30. Nothing emerged of it though. Earlier this year, the government had cracked down on UC Browser for allegedly sending user data to remote servers in China.
Even Xiaomi, which is India’s leading smartphone vendor now, had raised alarms in the country’s defense sector. In 2014 soon after it launched here, the Indian Air Force had issued a warning titled ‘Medium Severity Rating’ to those using Xiaomi phones. It alleged that Xiaomi phones were sending data to Chinese servers, without any authorization, and they would be able to gauge the co-ordinates of Indian defense forces that way. Xiaomi, of course, issued a clarification stating that it was moving its data out of China to other servers. Now onto these apps to respond to the Home Ministry’s charges.

FIRST SHORT STORY IN TAMIL

பாரதியார் சிறுகதை – “ஆறில் ஒரு பங்கு”


Image result for BHARATHIYAR IMAGES

பாரதியார் எழுதிய சிறுகதை ஒன்று – ஆறில் ஒரு பங்கு – பழைய சொல்வனம் இதழ் ஒன்றில் வெளியாகி இருக்கிறது. உலக மகா சிறுகதைகளில் வராதுதான், இருந்தாலும் படிக்கக் கூடிய சிறுகதைதான். நேரடியாகச் சொல்லப்படும், நுணுக்கங்கள் இல்லாத முன்னோடி சிறுகதை. சரளமான, ரசிக்கும்படியான நடை. கல்கியின் எந்தச் சிறுகதையுடனும் ஒப்பிடக் கூடிய தரத்தில் இருக்கிறது. நூறு வருஷங்களுக்கு முன் எழுதப்பட்ட சிறுகதை என்பது இதற்கு ஒரு ஸ்பெஷல் கவர்ச்சியைத் தருகிறது.
இறந்துபோன காதலி உயிருடன் இருக்கலாம் என்று நாயகன் அறியும்போது அவன் உணர்ச்சிகளை
ஸந்யாசி உடை தரித்து இருந்தேன். நெடுநாளாகத் துறவையே ஆதரித்து வந்திருக்கிறேன். வேஷத்திலென்னடா இருக்கிறது கோவிந்தா! வேஷத்தில் என்ன இருக்கிறது?
என்று சித்தரிக்கிறார். பிரமாதம்!
சிறுகதையில் நான் கவனித்த இரு விஷயங்கள்:
இந்நூலை, பாரத நாட்டில் உழவுத் தொழில் புரிந்து நமக்கெல்லாம் உணவு கொடுத்து ரக்ஷிப்பவர்களாகிய பள்ளர், பறையர் முதலிய பரிசுத்தத் தன்மை வாய்ந்த வைசிய சகோதரர்களுக்கு அர்ப்பணம் செய்கிறேன்
என்று எழுதுகிறார். பள்ளர், பறையர் எல்லோரும் பஞ்சமர் அல்ல, சூத்திரர் கூட அல்ல, வைசியர்! கதையிலும் இதை விளக்குகிறார் –
தென்நாட்டைப் போலவே, வட நாட்டிலும், இந்த வகுப்பினர் பெரும்பாலும் விவசாயத் தொழிலையே கைக்கொண்டிருக்கிறார்கள். உழவுத் தொழில் உடைய இவர்கள் சாஸ்திரப்படி வைசியர்கள் ஆக வேண்டும்.
கதையின் நடுவில் ஒரு வாக்கியம் –
நமது சிருங்ககிரிச் சங்கராச்சாரியாரும், வானமாமலை ஜீயர் ஸ்வாமிகளும் நெட்டால், திரான்ஸ்வால் தேசங்களுக்குப் போவார்களானால், ஊருக்கு வெளியே சேரிகளில் வாசம் செய்ய வேண்டும்.
காஞ்சி சங்கர மடம் ஆதிசங்கரர் ஏற்படுத்திய மடம் அல்ல, சிருங்கேரியின் துணை மடம் சந்திரசேகரேந்திர சரஸ்வதி காலத்தில் தனி மடமாகப் பரிணமித்தது, ஆனாலும் இப்போது அந்த மடம் ஆதிசங்கரர் ஏற்படுத்திய மடம்தான் என்று propaganda நடக்கிறது என்பதை கூட்டாஞ்சோறு பதிவுகளில் குறிப்பிட்டிருக்கிறேன். சந்திரசேகரேந்திர சரஸ்வதி தலையெடுப்பதற்கு முன்னால் வாழ்ந்த பாரதியும் சங்கர மடத்துக்கு உதாரணமாய் காஞ்சி மடத்தைக் குறிப்பிடாமல் சிருங்கேரி மடத்தைக் குறிப்பிடுவது – Note the point, your honor!

This short story book is Banned by Indian Govt.

Friday, 26 January 2018

12,000 tons of plastic cleared from Indian beach...

Volunteers have removed an astonishing 12 million kilograms (nearly 12,000 tons) of plastic from a short stretch of a Mumbai beach. 



But their efforts will be in vain unless the city authorities improve waste collection and dissuade people living in slums from using a creek as a rubbish dump.

Every weekend hundreds of people descend on the 3km section of Versova beach.

Inspired by lawyer Afroz Shah, the mass movement has been praised by Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

Mr Shah helped to launch Sky Ocean Rescue a year ago. Since then, Bollywood stars have donated diggers and tractors to help dig up plastic buried beneath the sand.

"This beach laps the plastic up," he said. "It acts like a net. You must pick it up or the next high tide will take it out and it will never come back. Then it harms marine life."

The beach had been waist-height in plastic, but lovers now stroll through the surf and children play cricket in the sand.

Local schoolchildren have joined the clean-up. Titiksha Kabra, 15, said: "We are clearing the mess created by our parents.

"If we don't want our generation to face the problem of plastic we have to come here and clean it up."
But just a short distance away, Sky News walked on a section of the same beach that is still covered in layer upon layer of plastic, mostly bags and food packaging.

The plastic was swept down a creek that runs from the city to the Arabian Sea. 

Mr Shah has now identified riverside slums that are the source of the plastic. He took Sky News to one slum, home to 5,000 people. 

The residents are largely migrants from other regions of India and their needs are ignored by the authorities, said Mr Shah. 

"There is no garbage pick up here. Nobody tells them how to handle plastic," he said.


But volunteers are now going from shack to shack, encouraging people to take their plastic to a recycler. They are paid five rupees (6p) for each kilogram of plastic bags they collect.


Already, 20,000kg of plastic a month is being sent for processing.

Wednesday, 24 January 2018

ROYAL ENFIELD LOVERS

About Royal Enfield...


Royal Enfield

THE BEGINNING
The Enfield Cycle Company made motorcycles, bicycles, lawnmowers and stationary engines under the name Royal Enfield out of its works based at Redditch, Worcestershire. The legacy of weapons manufacture is reflected in the logo comprising the cannon, and the motto "Made like a gun". Use of the brand name Royal Enfield was licensed by the Crown in 1890.

 Royal Enfield Quadricycle

THE EARLY YEARS
In 1909 Royal Enfield surprised the motorcycling world by introducing a small Motorcycle with a 2 ¼ HP V twin Motosacoche engine of Swiss origin. In 1911 the next model was powered by a 2 ¾ HP engine and boasted of the well known Enfield 2-speed gear. In 1912 came the JAP 6 HP 770 CC V twin with a sidecar combination. It was this motorcycle which made Enfield a household name. 1914 saw the 3 HP motorcycles this time with Enfield’s own engine which now had the standardised Enfield paint scheme of black enamelled parts and green tank with gold trim.

1907 Enfield 15

1913 Enfield 425cc

BETWEEN THE WARS
At the time of the outbreak of WW I Royal Enfield supplied consignments of their 6 HP sidecar Outfit motorcycles with Stretchers to the Crown. This same motorcycle also came with a Vickers machine Gun sidecar attachment which could also be turned skywards and used against low flying aircraft. Royal Enfield supplied large numbers of motorcycles to the British War Department and also won a motorcycle contract for the Imperial Russian Government.

1923 Royal Enfield 225cc

RE GT with Avon Speedflow nosecone fairing

RE GT with flyscreen

RE Turbo Twin
THE INDIA CONNECTION
Royal Enfield motorcycles were being sold in India ever since 1949. In 1955, the Indian government started looking for a suitable motorcycle for its police forces and the army for patrolling duties on the country's border. The Bullet 350 was chosen as the most suitable bike for the job. The Indian government ordered 800 of these 350 cc motorcycles, an enormous order for that time. Thus In 1955, the Redditch Company partnered with Madras Motors in India to form what was called 'Enfield India' to assemble these 350 cc Bullet motorcycle under licence in erstwhile madras (Now called Chennai). As per their agreement Madras Motors owned the majority (over 50%) of shares in the company. In 1957 tooling equipment was also sold to Enfield India so that they could manufacture components and start full-fledged production. The Enfield Bullet dominated the Indian highways and with each passing year its popularity kept rising.

 Enfield India 350cc- Madras

Royal Enfield in Madrid, Spain

 Royal Enfield Crusader

THE EICHER CHAPTER
In 1990, Enfield India entered into a strategic alliance with the Eicher Group, and later merged with it in 1994. It was during this merger that the name Enfield India changed to Royal Enfield. The Eicher Group is one of India's leading automotive groups with diversified interests in the manufacture of Tractors, Commercial Vehicles, Automotive Gears, Exports, Garments, Management Consultancy and Motorcycles. Since then, the Company has made considerable investments in modernizing its manufacturing technology and systems. In 1996, when the Government decided to impose stringent norms for emission Royal Enfield was the first motorcycle manufacturer to comply, a tradition which has stuck on thus making emission norms being one of the most important factors the company focuses on.

Royal Enfield Classic 500 in Belgium

 Royal Enfield 250 cc, type 11F

ROYAL ENFIELD
For 116 years now and counting, Royal Enfield is the world’s oldest motorcycling company in continuous production. With simple, resilient machines, rides in some of the world’s most exciting terrain, purpose-built riding wear and well-crafted leisurewear, Royal Enfield delivers a pure motorcycling experience.

Monday, 22 January 2018

Save childer from world corporates

7 Cartoons That Were Banned In Other Countries, But Surprisingly, Not In India

1.Pokemon

The ‘Pokemon Shock’ episode had an explosion affected kids. Over 600 kids had to be hospitalized for partial vision loss, convulsions, and loss of consciousness.

Countries: Japan, Turkey, and Arab countries.

Reason: Harmful for kids.

2.Spongebob

There were many controversies around Spongebob. The most impactful one was the one with suicide. Cartoons are supposed to be educative and have positive characters. Who would want the future generation to be impacted this way? A few episodes were banned.

Countries: U.S.A, Europe, Australia and other 120 countries.

Reason: Violence and foul language.

3.Talespin

That bear, Baloo was delivering a bomb and gets away with it just because he didn’t know what was in it. What would the kids learn? Clearly no what they were supposed to.

Countries: U.S.A, Japan, and the rest of the world followed.

Reason: False representation of the law.

4.Tom and Jerry

Although the series was broadcasted for a long 50 years, a lot of scenes were banned and characters were replaced. The main problem was said to be the unpunished violence.

Countries: Throughout the world.

Reason: Violence and substance abuse.

5.The Simpsons

Okay, let’s face it The Simpsons are a quite messed up family. The cartoon featured plenty of questionable sequences that sparked debate.

Countries: Brazil, U.S.A and the rest of the world.

Reasons: Disorderly behavior and the humiliation of family values.

6.Looney Tunes

There is this one episode where the characters steal beer bottles and drink it all. Yeah, you watched that as a kid. No wonder, right?

Countries: Throughout the world, except India of course.

Reasons: Alcohol consumption.

7.Cartoons where Donald Duck appears

We’re finding this funny for some reason. In some countries where the cartoons aired, Donald Duck started disappearing. The reason was that he didn’t wear pants and had an abnormal obsession with money. Because bacche kya seekhengey?

Countries: Finland

Reasons: Pornography.

Sunday, 21 January 2018

12 Everyday Things That Are Banned Abroad But Not In India




​There's a whole lot of stuff that's banned in India, and the movement is only getting larger. With media attention focused so much on this practise though, it's easy to forget that they also outlaw things in other parts of the world. Some of the things we see so commonly around us in everyday life are actually rare commodities in other countries. Let's just say, a lot of times things don't get to fly under the radar. Check out these things that are banned abroad but not in India! 

1. Lifebuoy Soap These soaps are considered bad for the skin, and are apparently only used to clean certain animals abroad. It is openly sold in India as a regular soap for humans however.
   

2. Red Bull Red Bull was banned in France and Denmark, and remains banned in Lithuania for people under 18 years of age. The energy drink can lead to heart problems, depression, hypertension and convulsions, though I personally don't mind one every now and then. ​​  

3. Disprin India sees the sale of a lot of medically and legally dubious drugs, and most of us lap them up. This includes the common Disprin, which is our reply to almost any office or home ailment. ​​  

4. Pesticides There are more than 60 harmful pesticides banned in other countries but not in India. These chemicals come into our plants and can lead to several health problems later in life. ​​  

5. Unpasteurised Milk Due to the presence of harmful microbes and germs in unpasteurised milk, it is banned in almost all of the USA and Canada. While this stuff can make you seriously ill, it is easily available in the motherland. ​​  

6. Jelly Sweets These little candies were recalled and are now not imported into USA, Canada and Australia. They pose a choking hazard, and there have been several reported cases of children choking on them. They're widely available here though. ​​  

7. Samosas Samosas are banned in Somalia, all thanks to the Jihadist terrorist group Al-Shabaab. These samosa haters enforced the ban in the areas they control by claiming the food was "too Christian". Al-Qaeda would be so disappointed. ​​  

8. Kinder Chocolate The Kinder surprise, which you might have noticed in a little colourful egg case, is banned in America. The toy that comes with the candy inside is deemed a choking hazard. You can also use this argument as leverage in your "India is better than America" debate. ​​  

9. Tata Nano Our beloved low price vehicle failed the independent crash test conducted by Gobal NCAP. This basically means that occupants of the car would be at risk of life threatening injuries. They banned it in other countries, but not here. ​​  

10. Maruti Suzuki Alto 800 Another one that failed a whole string of safety tests and guidelines, this car is also banned in several other countries, but is pretty popular here. ​​  

11. D-Cold Total Another medicine that's hugely popular here but banned abroad, D-Cold can apparently lead to kidney problems. Rather a cold and flu than that! ​​L  

12. Nimulid The common pain killer is actually banned in USA, Australia, Canada Britain and a host of other countries. The ban was because it had severe health hazards for the liver, and had some very scary side effects. It's available here though. ​​

Sunday, 14 January 2018

Exclusive: Missile attack hits refugee camp in Syria

A missile has crashed near civilians in Syria's Idlib province at a makeshift camp for displaced people from the nearby Hama province. 
Dramatic footage captured in the countryside area by Al Jazeera showed men, women and children desperately trying to find the nearest cover after the attack - images of which were also included in the film.
Al Jazeera's Sinem Koseoglu, reporting from Antakya in southern Turkey, said the missile strike was the strongest violation yet of a peace accord agreed in Kazakhstan's capital, Astana, recently between Russia, Turkey and Iran.
"Syrians are not surprised. Many of them believe that it is a kind of the diplomatic leverage game just before the Sochi meeting that is going to be held at the end of January," she said.

Violence elsewhere

A push by the forces loyal to Syria's President Bashar al-Assad aided by Russian air raids was causing a new wave of displacement from rebel-held territories.
About 120,000 people have fled their homes in Idlib province in recent weeks.
At least 179 people were killed in the besieged Damascus suburb of Eastern Ghouta in the past two weeks, according to activists.
Several people were in hospital after a bombing by government forces in Eastern Ghouta.
Aid workers on the scene said there were being treated for suffocation after a suspected chlorine gas attack.