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Aug 27, 2010

do u know???

1. The speed of light is 186,000 miles per second.
Every second around 100 lightning bolts strike the Earth.
Every year lightning kills 1000 people.
If you could drive your car straight up you would arrive in space in just over an hour.
The Earth is 4.56 billion years old. The same age as the Moon and the Sun.
If our Sun were just inch in diameter, the nearest star would be 445 miles away.
The tallest tree ever was an Australian eucalyptus - In 1872 it was measured at 435 feet tall.
In 5 billion years the Sun will run out of fuel and turn into a Red Giant.
Without its lining of mucus your stomach would digest itself.
There are 60,000 miles of blood vessels in the human body.
On the day that Alexander Graham Bell was buried the entire US telephone system was shut down for 1 minute in tribute.
The fastest speed a falling raindrop can hit you is 18mph.
Tuberculosis is the biggest global killer of women.
The highest recorded train speed is 320.2 mph by the TGV train in France.
The highest speed ever achieved on a bicycle is 166.94 mph by Fred Rompelburg.
85. 15% of the world's fresh water flows down the Amazon.
The temperature at the center of the Earth is estimated to be 5500 degrees Celsius.
Neutron stars are so dense that a teaspoonful would weigh more than all the people on Earth.
The Walkman was launched in Japan by Sony in 1979.
A quarter of the world’s plants are threatened with extinction by the year 2010.
Stewardesses" is the longest word that is typed with only the left hand.
The average 21 year old has spent 5,000 hours playing video games, has exchanged 250,000 e-mails, instant and text messages and has spent 10,000 hours on the mobile phone.
• The world's first computer, called the Z1, was invented by Konrad Zuse in 1936. His next invention, the Z2 was finished in 1939 and was the first fully functioning electro-mechanical computer.

Aug 21, 2010

avast 5

the best anti virus is avast 5 free edition becoz it catches the all types of virus.
so guys please download avast 5 from the offical site

happy onam

cce system

continuous and Comprehensive Evaluation refers to a system of school based assessment that covers all aspects of student’s development.
It emphasizes two fold objectives.Continuity in evaluation and assessment of broad based learning.

CCE helps in reducing stress of students by :-
Identifying learning progress of students at regular time intervals on small portions of content.
Employing a variety of remedial measures of teaching based on learning needs and potential of different students.
Desisting from using negative comments on the learner’s performance.
Encouraging learning through employment of a variety of teaching aids and techniques.
Involving learners actively in the learning process.
Recognizing and encouraging specific abilities of students, who do not excel in academics but perform well in other co-curricular areas.

Aug 15, 2010

cce

CBSE announced new scheme of examination in 2009. Now class 9 and class 10 will have two terms in an academic year. Term 1 is from April to September and Term 2 is from October to March.

The Comprehensive and Continuous Evaluation will be done at the school through Formative and summative assessments. Sample Papers for summative assessment and guidelines cum suggestive activities for formative assessment are provided at http://mycbseguide.com for FREE download.

CBSE Sample Papers for class 9 CCE Summative and Formative assessment in English Communicative, English Language and Literature, Hindi Course A and Hindi Course B are now available for FREE download at http://mycbseguide.com.

Marking Scheme for class 9 CCE Sample Papers for these subjects is also made available for FREE download. Visitors can download Design of CCE Question Paper, and Changes made in the Pattern of question paper

Aug 6, 2010





Enthiran the robot .. don't miss it .............................................
download the songs from 123musiq.com

Aug 1, 2010

cce sample papers 2010 for class ix and x

download the sample papers from this site and study for SA 1 .
download sanskrit font or hindi.......
http://cbse.nic.in/welcome.htm

Feynman's Rainbow

Richard Feynman was one of our more interesting physicists. Lodged at the California Institute of Technology (known affectionately as CalTech), he was the university's "resident genius and iconoclast." Although a book about Feynman (including his own) will always reflect the view of the author, in this entertaining and enlightening work, Leonard Mlodinow shares his memories of a remarkable year in the presence of a very mortal man.

Because Feynman was fighting cancer, perhaps Mlodinow had access to him at a time when his own ideas about life and priorities were changing. It's difficult to know, but we are given a portrait of a man who had always forged his own way in life and in academics. Known for making up his own rules for research, he nonetheless was responsible for some remarkable theories which were found unacceptable for many years. Some of his ideas about an unobservable particle like a quark, in fact, smacked of being a bit "over the edge" (they have since been determined more than reasonable by the scientific community). Mlodinow reports, however, that Feynman considered his theories to be solid science and that he would say, when the topic was brought up, that he had doctor's orders not to discuss metaphysics.

I remember seeing a television program that had some film from one of Feynman's school lectures. A strikingly handsome man, he had a charisma that made him seem rather romantic, yet he is arguably one of the brightest stars in our scientific universe. And I intend to learn more about this fascinating man who, in my mind, walked a similar path to another unusual physicist - Albert Einstein. Both men were willing to go their own way, to challenge the way science is carried out. Both have earned my respect and admiration.

Feynman's Rainbow is a good book. The science in it is accessible and much is explained for those who are not actually genius material ourselves, like me. I just love science. So I need someone to explain things in a language that I can grasp, and Mlodinow has done just that. His conversations with Feynman touch on the nature of science, art, mathematics, the creative process, God and even rainbows. A pure delight, but also an indepth look at the competitive and sometimes frustrating lives of our scientific leaders.

So if you're interested in Feynman, or physics, or both, be sure to include Feynman's Rainbow on your reading list. It's a quick read and one you won't soon forget.