Mar 30, 2010

Funny Toilets Pics..........

Posted by Tanushree

Here are some toilets that are really funny and hilarious. They are enough to make you wet yourself laughing.

Don't these zany toilets make the dready job of relieving yourself a whole lotta extra fun!


UNTIL now, the word “extreme” was simply a great score in Scrabble – now it’s a whole new way to play the word game that is celebrating its 60th anniversary. Extreme Scrabble involves playing the game in the scariest places on – and above – Earth. The name Scrabble comes from the Dutch word Schrabbelan, meaning to claw or to scrape, and over 150million sets have been produced in the game’s 60-year history. An estimated 30,000 games begin every hour, and there are over 400 Scrabble clubs around the world. The game is produced in over 29 languages, the latest of which is Welsh. Below are some extreme vanues to play the Scrabble, however it’s not for ordinary people.
extreme scrabble 01
Skydivers Nicole Angelides and Ramsey Kent use glue to stick letters to their Scrabble board 13,000ft over Florida.
extreme scrabble 02
Dangerous game … two people risk life and limb to play Scrabble near alligators in Florida, USA
extreme scrabble 03
From highs to lows, in the blue waters of the Bahamas two scuba divers pit their wits – and nerves – during a game surrounded by sharks.Back on solid ground, keen Scrabble players Kevin Richard and Helga van Der Merwe risk a mauling – with a game in front of lionesses Meg and Amy in Lanseria, South Africa. Two deep sea divers play scrabble on a sunken ship off the coast of the Bahamas surrounded by Caribbean Reef Sharks.
extreme scrabble 04
Game couple … gamekeepers Kevin Richard and Helga van der Merwe play Scrabble in the company of lionesses Meg and Amy in South Africa
extreme scrabble 05
Meanwhile, climbers Jon Ratcliffe and Steve Franklin have a battle of words on a ledge 200ft up the sea cliff of Castell Helen in Anglesey, North Wales.
extreme scrabble 06

Ice one, girls … models Nicola Graham (left) and Bim Hargreaves play Scrabble in an ice cave in New Zealand.
extreme scrabble 07

 Source




The magnitude 8.8 quake that struck near Maule, Chile, Feb. 27 moved the entire city of Concepcion 10 feet to the west.

Precise GPS measurements from before and after the earthquake, the fifth largest ever recorded by seismographs, show that the country’s capital, Santiago, moved 11 inches west. Even Buenos Aires, nearly 800 miles from the epicenter, shifted an inch. The image above uses red arrows to represent the relative direction and magnitude of the ground movement in the vicinity of the quake.

Read the full story at Wired Science

Australian experts are divided over fresh British research that says the oral contraceptive pill is good for women.
The study published in the British Medical Journal says women who have taken the pill are less likely to die from any cause, including all cancers and heart disease, compared with those who have never used it.
The UK researchers followed 46,000 women for nearly 40 years, in what is now one of the world's largest contraceptive pill studies.
Some Australian academics back the findings but others warn the study is flawed and fails to consider the pill's effect on mental health.
Professor Jayashri Kulkarni from the Monash Alfred Psychiatry Research Centre in Melbourne says she is concerned about the size of the study and the conclusions drawn from it.
"There are all sorts of anomalies that worry me," she says.
"Big epidemiological studies that have many flaws such as this one are not predictive in side effects and other effects of medication.
"It will create a lot of interest and excitement, but won't be helpful for individual women as it is not designed for that.
"The study results could give the false impression that the pill somehow decreases cancer when in fact the finding may be due to the loss of follow up of women who actually died from clotting problems on the pill."
Kulkarni says while the study addresses the pill's physical impact it is also important to look at how the pill influences women's general wellbeing.
She has spent years researching the link between oral contraceptives and depression in Australian women.
"We have been very concerned about the impact of the progesterone component of the pills that are most commonly used, in that progesterone seems to have a depressive effect and many women describe an insidious, slow onset of depression," she says.
"That's not something that's significantly looked at in research studies.
"The studies focus on physical wellbeing, but in fact it's the mental wellbeing that really is the biggest contributor to women deciding to go off the pill or change pills."
The UK study did find a higher rate of violent death, such as suicide, among pill users.

Protects against cancer

But Professor John Hopper from the University of Melbourne's School of Population Health believes the pill can be beneficial for women and says he has found it can protect against cancer.
In a recent study he found that women with mutations in genes BRCA 1 and BRCA 2 - which places them at a higher risk of developing breast and ovarian cancer - may in fact be protected by the pill.
"We'd been conducting studies of women with mutations in those genes to find out what might increase or decrease risk for those women," he says.
"We had the hypothesis that use of oral contraceptions would actually be bad for these women.
"To our surprise, we found that for women who had a mutation in BRCA 1, the data was telling us that if they used oral contraception they may be protected from ovarian cancer.
"So for women with a certain high risk of breast cancer, the pill might actually be protective against breast cancer and ovarian cancer."
Hopper admits there is research which shows increased risks for women who take the pill, but says oral contraception has come a long way since it was introduced in the early 1960s.
"Although there might be reports of it having side affects... now, in the longer term, you have bigger studies and you may be getting a better answer than what you were at the time when it [the pill] first came out," he says.
"There were problems with the pill, they seem to have been addressed. We've got to keep on monitoring these things, but it may be surprisingly protective for some women and this could be an important finding."
Kulkarni says there need to be more well-designed trials of different pills so that women and their doctors can determine the best oral contraceptive for them.
"The pill is a significant, empowering development for women and the next important step forward is the further development of an effective contraception with optimal physical and mental health safety," she says.
While the British study did find a slightly higher risk in women under 45 years of age who are current or recent users of the pill, the researchers found that the effects in younger women disappear after about 10 years and the benefits in older women outweigh the smaller excess risks among younger women.
Source

Mar 16, 2010

Only To Remember You………

Posted by Tanushree

Love is life. And if you miss love, you miss life.

Like A Rose
You are the
Blossom of my life
It is your touch
That will engrave
Upon my heart
The sonnet that has
Not been thought of.

Like A Rose
Your sweet fragrance &
Extraordinary glamour
Leave the beauticians &
The perfumeries
Marveling at such an
Opposition.

Like A Rose
The colors of your soul
The grace of your presence &
The melody of your voice
Bestow upon me
The utmost desire to
Embrace you forever

Optical illusions

Posted by Tanushree

PLEASE WAIT UNTIL THE GROUP CHANGES POSITIONS.
IS IT TWELVE OR THIRTEEN??


This will drive you crazy!
WHERE DOES THE EXTRA MAN COME FROM?

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Three or Two!

Look at the middle column.
Where does it end?
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