17 Feb 2012

Thought Provoking Email.., Conversation with God

Received this thought provoking email from one of my friend, and I want to share it here with everyone.

Me (in a panic): God, can I ask you something?
GOD: Sure.
Me: Promise you won't get mad?
GOD: I promise.
Me (frustrated): Why did you let so much stuff happen to me today?
GOD: What do you mean?
Me: Well I woke up late.
GOD: Yes.
Me: My car took forever to start.
GOD: Okay....
Me (growling): At lunch, they made my sandwich wrong and I had to wait.
GOD: Hmmmm..
Me: On the way home, my phone went dead, just as I picked up a call.
GOD: All right.
Me (loudly): And to top it all off, when I got home, I just wanted to soak my feet in my foot massager and relax, but it wouldn't work. Nothing went right today! Why did you do that?

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GOD: Well let me see..... the death angel was at your bed this morning and I had to send one of the other angels to battle him for your life. I let you sleep through that.
Me (humbled): Oh...
GOD: I didn't let your car start because there was a drunk driver on your route that would have hit you if you were on the road.
Me (ashamed): …..
GOD: The first person who made your sandwich today was sick and I didn't want you to catch what they have, I knew you couldn't afford to miss work.
Me (embarrassed): Oh.....
GOD: Your phone went dead because the person that was calling was going to give a false witness about what you said on that call, I didn't even let you talk to them so you would be covered.
Me (softly): I see God.
GOD: Oh and that foot massager, it had a short that was going to throw out all of the power in your house tonight. I didn't think you wanted to be in the dark.
Me: I'm sorry God.
GOD: Don't be sorry, just learn to trust me in all things, the good and the bad.
Me: I WILL trust you God.
GOD: And don't doubt that my plan for your day is always better than your plan.
Me: I won't God. And let me just tell you God, thank you for everything today.
GOD: you're welcome child. It was just another day being your God.

6 Feb 2012

Clearing clipboard in Windows 7

Copy-Paste (Ctrl+C - Ctrl+V) is one of the most widely used option by computer users worldwide. Everything you copies is stored in Clipboard. But did you know that  every copied data (stored in clipboard) is accessible from the internet by a combination of Java scripts and ASP? Surprised smile In short... Every data which is in your PC's clipboard is unsafe and can be accessed-stolen by website or hacker if your PC is connected to internet.

Don't keep sensitive data in the clipboard while using the internet. Best way to protect your data is to delete copied data from clipboard soon after pasted it.

To create shortcut which will clear your PC's clipboard everytime you run it... Follow the below steps:

1. Right-click on desktop and select... New > Shortcut option.
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2. In shortcut location box type cmd.exe /c echo off | clip
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3. Now type any name you want for that Shortcut and click Finish

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Its Done. Angel

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Feeling Safe? Open-mouthed smile Please don't. Because nothing is safe on PC from expert hackers. Angry smile So never keep any sensitive information in your computer if your computer is connected to internet.

11 Jan 2012

Another blow to Iran's nuclear program

Another bomb explosion in Iran.., Another  Iranian nuclear scientists died.., Another blow to Iran's nuclear program.., Everything happening like Hollywood movie. Here I am posting article from guardian’s website, writer is Julian Borger.


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Published: 11 January 2012

Tittle + Link of the original article: Goading a regime on the brink


The car belonging to Iranian nuclear scientist Mostafa Ahmadi-Roshan is lifted at the site of an explosion outside a university in northern Tehran

The car belonging to Iranian nuclear scientist Mostafa Ahmadi-Roshan is lifted at the site of an explosion outside a university in northern Tehran.


Mostafa Ahmadi-Roshan was not the first Iranian nuclear scientist to be killed like this. In November 2010, not very far from the scene of today's assassination there were two identical attacks, in which a motorcycle drew up alongside the victim's car while it was in traffic and the riders stuck a magnetic bomb on the door. The bombs detonated as the assassins rode off.

One of those bombs killed Majid Shahriari, a member of the nuclear engineering faculty at Shahid Beheshti University in Tehran who was working on research projects with the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran (AEOI). The other slightly wounded Fereydoun Abbasi-Davani, the subject of UN sanctions and widely suspected in the West of involvement in nuclear weapon design.

In a reflection of his importance in the Iranian programme, Abbasi-Davani was made the head of the AEOI a few months later. Both he and Shahriari were big fish, like the first victim of the assassination campaign, a senior physicist, Masoud Ali Mohammadi, killed in January 2010 when a bomb on a parked motorcycle exploded as he walked to his car.

Ahmadi-Roshan, who was killed in today's blast, is reported to have held the position of deputy director at the uranium enrichment plant in Natanz, one of the most controversial parts of the programme. Iran is the subject of a string of UN Security Council resolutions and four sets of sanctions calling for it to suspend enrichment.

Not all the victims have been so senior. In July last year, gunmen on motorbikes shot dead July 2011, Darioush Rezaeinejad, an electronics student who was according to some accounts working on high-voltage switches, a component of nuclear weapons among other things.

The killers are clearly using loose criteria in choosing their victims. Any connection to any part of the nuclear programme seems to be enough to be selected as a target of opportunity.

Iranian officials have been quick to blame Israel, and the Israelis have not been going out of their way to avoid suspicion. On Tuesday, the head of the Israeli Defence Force, Lieutenant General Benny Gantz was quoted as telling a parliamentary panel that 2012 would be a "critical year" for Iran in which it would be subject to "unnatural" events.

The Israeli military establishment have a motive to claim successes in the covert war on Iran, because they are under political pressure to start an overt one. The generals, however, know that Israeli air strikes would unleash a war without accomplishing their goal of destroying the Iranian nuclear programme.

A covert war, based on assassinations and sabotage, may appear a better alternative. Individual killings may not seriously hinder a large, wide-ranging programme, but they would certainly deter young Iranians from taking that line of work.

But such a campaign is not without huge risks for the region. The regime in Iran has clearly tried to hold its nerve, avoiding overt reprisals that might in turn provoke a military response. But elements of the establishment do seem to be lashing out in frustration.

Last October's bomb plot against the Saudi ambassador and Israeli diplomats in Washington, alleged to be the work of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard, was both amateurish and extremely reckless. If Americans had been killed in the Georgetown restaurant that was supposedly the target, the Obama administration would have been obliged to respond militarily.

Likewise, the storming of the British embassy, on the anniversary of Shahriari's assassination, appeared to have gone much further than the leadership had intended, and significantly deepened Tehran's isolation.

"The old guys at the top are losing control of the situation," a senior western diplomat observed, the day before this latest killing. The fragmentation of the regime will have unpredictable, and possibly very violent outcomes. The pressure of sanctions is building. There is a lot of military hardware in the Gulf right now, some of belonging to the regularly Iranian navy and some to the Revolutionary Guards, who have their own agenda. Whoever is killing Iran's scientists is clearly willing to risk catastrophic consequences that could engulf the region.


Copyrights: © 2012 Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved.

4 Jan 2012

Stopping unwanted emails in Gmail

Sometimes you may get unwanted mail that isn't necessarily spam. Gmail  allows its users to create a filter that will send messages from the specified email directly to the trash folder. This will effectively block messages of the specific email address from reaching your inbox. Also Gmail gives option to report about those Gmail users who harassing someone via his/her Gmail account.



 
- Creating Filters in Gmail:

Step 1- Log in to your Gmail account, and Go to Settings.

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Step 2- Click the Filter option.

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Step 3- Click Create a new filter option.

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Step 4- Enter the email address you want to block in the From field and click the Create filter with this search option.

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Step 5- Select the Delete it and Click the Create Filter option.

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Its done. Thumbs up

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Now Gmail will Trash all the messages from the email address you entered in newly created filter.


- Reporting those who harassing you:

If you facing Harassment from a Gmail user then you can Report that user to Gmail. To report those users who violate the Gmail program policies and rules go HERE.