Thursday, 10 March 2016

Online Money Earning schemes

Earn online.

Be aware of scams.Think and create your own Content Publish it, share and earn.

I have been checking google most searched Content which is recently can be called as most frequently Typed keywords. Ever since i get to study more about the most searched content,various topics and Relational contents it used to be a factor that are affecting our daily habit and thinking.

Let me give you few Examples:


When we get Bored we go to google the we don't know what to type.

When we are searching something entertaining on google,it is only 50% chances we will click on same link we searched for.

Something is distracting us from our link.

What is that..?

That is another link which is visible at the same time on our screen it is just to get your attention.

It has nothing related with our desired search but it may contain something which might be interesting for you. These attractions are created by Google which are called as ads that is what its all about this is the only source of running the virtual market.

Google is paying for such ads and even charging before placing them.

What to do..?

Only thing you have to do is to become a Retailer Yes .. Retailer.

By Retailer i mean become the intermediate among the buyer and seller, Google is the best source of helping you with this.

Steps:


  • Create an Account on google Adsense,
  • Read the Terms and Conditions carefully.
  • Check your Account like Youtube, Blogger, or any other Website.
  • Linkup your Google adsense account with your Site/Blog.
  • If you are not getting an idea just click here


What is First Step...?

Chose your content.
What you are going to say the world really matters. you should really know what they really want when they are bored.

If you dony know..?   just ask yourself...


  • First 5 things you are frequently searching on google its the same way you feel the other people would be when they are bored.
  • Make your content Sharp and small.
  • Give them what they want(Entertainment)
  • Use pictures or funny Videos(Not Copyrighted)


Get People Entertained when the are bored and you can earn.

How much it will help you

It doesn't matter you start slow.. But you will reach enough traffic.. keep Posting .. Keep going..
You will reach ..    Lets Get Started.   Good luck!
("Sorry for my Grammar :)") Peace














Monday, 22 February 2016

iPhone Release date

Release date of iphone 7

Everything you need to know about Apple's new iPhone

That was to be expected – after all, Apple typically only overhauls its handsets once every two years, but that overhaul is due with the iPhone 7, so we're expecting and hoping for big changes: think a whole new design, piles of power and a bunch of new features.

The leaks, rumors and reports are already starts coming up, although the iPhone 7 probably won't arrive until late 2016. We've collected all the latest from around the web and beyond for you below, to give you the clearest picture possible of what you can expect from the new iPhone.

Release date

iPhone is Expected to be released on this September. Rumors have been made about it and expected to have a dual rear camera and laser keyboard.


The big news for iPhone fans is the iPhone 7 will probably get a higher resolution display, specifically a QHD one with a resolution of 2560 x 1440—as many Android handsets already have. This will match the resolution of the Galaxy S7.




Saturday, 8 November 2014

One of the Highest Paid Players


One of the Highest Paid Players list includes...

Real Madrid superstar Cristiano Ronaldo was the second highest earner, but some $25m shy of Mayweather; the Portuguese winger earned $80m in the last year. Around $28m of this, according to Forbes, comes from some of the serial record breaker's many endorsements which includes the likes of Nike and Samsung.
The current world player of the year has had a stellar 12 months after winning the Champions league with his club team and being crowned with the Ballon D'or.
Basketball supreme LeBron James takes third place after bringing in $72.3m, just ahead of Ronaldo's biggest rival and threat to his current Ballon D'or title - Lionel Messi.
The Argentine whizz mustered up a healthy $64.7m, which included a salary of $41.7m from his club side, Barcelona.
Kobe Bryant, the LA Lakers Basketball legend who is now in the twilight of his career, still brought in $61.5m, slightly ahead of Tiger Woods.

The Golfing giant, who is the only other athlete to have brought in more than $100m in one year, earned a more 'modest' $61.2m. Wood's form on the golf course hasn't been great: only a tenth of his annual takings comes from prize money, with the rest in the form of sponsorships and endorsements.
Ronaldo's team-mate Gareth Bale and F1 driver Lewis Hamilton are the only Brits that have managed to break into top 20 of a list dominated by Americans; earning $36.4m and $32m respectively.
Manchester United and England Captain Wayne Rooney makes number 43 in the compilation having earned $23.4m, while his international team mate and Liverpool stalwart Steven Gerrard sits in the lower end of the top 100, having earned $18.7m in 86th place.
American boxing superstar Floyd Mayweather has again come out on top of the list of the world's top-paid sports stars.
The undefeated 37-year-old star fought just twice in the last 12 months, but despite his lack of endorsements he raked in enough from the bouts against Canelo Alvarez and Marcos Maidana to collect an astonising $105 million - or £66m.
No wonder he's nicknamed himself 'Money', and constantly flouts his wealth with pictures on Instagram.
Perhaps most surprising of all, however, is how he makes so much: while the other top earners make a huge chunk of their money through endorsements (90 per cent of it, in the case of golfers and tennis players), the boxer's money all comes through earnings. His huge deal with Showtime TV guarantees him at least £25m per fight, but he also makes a huge amount working as a promoter for other fighters.
Mayweather's cash haul was enough to see him overtake Tiger Woods at the top of Forbes magazine's latest rankings of the world's best-paid athletes, £16m ahead of Cristiano Ronaldo on £50m.
Basketball superstar LeBron James was third on £45.2m, just ahead of Lionel Messi on £40.5m.
Another NBA legend, Kobe Bryant, rounded out the top five on £38.5m, with Woods right behind in sixth place.
Mayweather's giant pay makes him only the second man in history - behind Woods - to earn more than $100 million in a single year through sport.
Adjusting figures for inflation, however, Forbes reports that Michael Jordan, Michael Schumacher and Mike Tyson have all enjoyed nine-figure years in the past. [Note to self: if sporting career ever takes off, change name to variant of "Michael".]
Tiger Woods is sixth, his lowest position since 1997, the year in which he won his first Major title barely six months after turning professional, and in which he was also sixth on the list. The golfer topped the list 10 years running from 2002 onwards, with Mayweather top in 2012, and Woods regaining top spot (briefly) last year.
Further down the list, Roger Federer in seventh earns bragging rights in tennis earnings ahead of Rafa Nadal, with Novak Djokovic down in 17th despite having the best year on court of anyone.
Djokovic suffers the ignominy of being three places lower than Gareth Bale; the Welshman's £22.8m makes him football's fourth best-paid player behind Ronaldo, Messi and Zlatan Ibrahimovc (12th on £25.3).
Bale is also the top British star on the list: F1 ace Lewis Hamilton is 19th, barely scraping a top-20 spot with his £20m salary.

Monday, 27 October 2014

Apple and Android fans on reddit join forces to boycott CurrentC

Apple and Android fans on reddit join forces to boycott CurrentC


In a shocking turn of events, Apple and Android fans on reddit have joined forces to collectively boycott the unethical blocking of NFC payment system by certain retailers, which affects both Apple Pay and Google Wallet users.







If you're not aware, some of the retailers in the US have started disabling their NFC systems in their stores to prevent people from using Apple Pay or any other NFC based payment system. The reason for this is that these retailers are part of an organization called Merchant Customer Exchange, or MCX, which has its own payment system Called CurrentC.
Instead of a secure, wireless system, CurrentC requires users to download an app and fill in their debit card information in that. Then every time you have to purchase something you have to scan a QR code with the app, and then pay for it. The app is also used to shove promotional content and coupons to users, which they may or may not want.
Other than being inconvenient and annoying, CurrentC is nowhere as secure as either Apple Pay or Google Wallet. But having an alternate payment system is one thing. Blocking out competitive services entirely so that users have to either pay cash, card, or use CurrentC is another, entirely unethical and anti-competitive business strategy.
While the law would eventually come into the picture, people are now starting to boycott this practice. /r/Apple and /r/Android are fairly popular subreddits and if the two can actually come together and manage to get this done it will for the good of everyone.
For Best deals in Mobiles click here.

Monday, 9 June 2014

French Open: Novak Djokovic Still Hopes for Win at Roland Garros


Paris:  Novak Djokovic on Sunday vowed to battle on in his quest to win the French Open and complete his collection of all four Grand Slam titles.




Only seven men in history have swept the boards at Wimbledon, and the US, French and Australian Opens, and the achievement is held in the highest esteem in the tennis world. (Djokovic Always Pushes me to the limit: Nadal)

But apart from a superb first set in Sunday's final at Roland Garros against Rafael Nadal, Djokovic never really looked like adding his name to that list as he went down 3-6, 7-5, 6-2, 6-4. (French Open Victory is Payback for Australian Open Misery, Says Nadal)

It was a hammer blow for the 27-year-old Serb, a six-time Grand Slam winner, but who has lost his last three finals in majors following his losses last year to Andy Murray at Wimbledon and Nadal at the US Open. 

Despite losing to Nadal at Roland Garros in the last three years -- in the final of 2012 and the semifinals last year -- Djokovic said he still had hope, all the more so for the long standing ovation he received at the start of the prize ceremony. 

"It was fantastic. I am so grateful for the opportunity to play here," he said. 

"Of course it's right after you go off the court and you want this title so much and you don't win it for several years now, and it's disappointing.

"But it's not the first time that I have this particular experience. At the end of the day, you have to put things in perspective and see where I come from and what kind of life I have. It's a blessing. 

"So to be able to also be appreciated by the fans the way I was in the end of the match just gives me more, I'd say strength and motivation to come back here and try till the end of my career hopefully to get at least a title." 

If Djokovic needs any encouragement when he ponders his Paris defeats, he need look no further than his other big rival Roger Federer. 

The Swiss great swept all before him, but repeatedly came up short at the French Open, usually at the hands of Nadal. 

It looked at one stage, after 10 failed campaigns on the Paris clay courts that he would never bag the elusive win that would consecrate his career, when out of the blue Robin Soderling defeated Nadal in a huge upset in the 2009 fourth round. 

Federer duly entered the history books a week later when he beat Soderling in straight sets in the final.

Djokovic has now also come up short in 10 French Opens, so if Federer is anything to go by, next year could see him finally hold aloft the Coupe des Mousquetaires.



Sunday, 16 March 2014

Missing Malaysia Flight 


BEIJING (AP) — The search for a missing jetliner with Chinese travelers aboard has revealed the limits of Beijing's influence in its own backyard and left communist leaders facing outrage from their public.
Beijing has demanded Malaysia do more to find the missing Malaysia Airlines jetliner. But despite sending nine ships to help in the search, China appears to have little leverage over its far smaller Southeast Asian neighbor.
The situation is especially uncomfortable for Chinese leaders because part of the ruling Communist Party's claim to a monopoly on power is that it is best qualified to look after the public's interests. The rise of social media and the increased willingness of China's public to assert its rights adds to the pressure to find the 154 Chinese among the 227 missing passengers.
There is "very likely a lot more pressure from the domestic community in China on Beijing to make sure that Chinese nationals are being protected," said Marc Lanteigne, research director at the New Zealand Contemporary China Research Centre at Victoria University of Wellington.
Anxious relatives have thronged a temporary Malaysia Airlines office set up in a Beijing hotel and accuse Malaysian officials and the carrier of withholding information.
"Some of the information released by the Malaysian government and airline turns out to be true, some turns out to be false," said Nan Jinyan, a woman from Shanghai whose brother-in-law was aboard the flight. "I believe they are still deciding which information to release and which isn't convenient to release right now."
China has the world's second-largest military budget, at $114 billion last year, and has spent heavily on expanding the ability of its navy to project power farther from its shores. But the search that began in the Gulf of Thailand on the edge of the South China Sea, which China claims as its territorial waters, has relied heavily on expertise from the United States and Britain on the other side of the globe.
China is the biggest trading partner for most of its Asian neighbors, buying tens of billions of dollars' worth of raw materials and components from them annually. Yet despite such incentives for cooperation, countries from Vietnam to Australia are uneasy about China's ambitions, which has hampered its efforts to acquire influence.
Beijing has resorted to taking the unusual step of publicly haranguing Malaysia's government, a sign that whatever pressure it is applying in private is failing to produce results.
After Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak said Saturday that the Boeing 777 might have flown beyond the current search area, Beijing reacted with fury, a sign that the announcement took it by surprise.
A deputy Chinese foreign minister demanded "more thorough and accurate information" about the new search area.
A stinging commentary by China's official Xinhua News Agency accused Malaysia and the United States of dragging their feet.
"Given today's technology, the delay smacks of either dereliction of duty or reluctance to share information in a full and timely manner," Xinhua said. It said Malaysia "bears inescapable responsibility."
Xinhua said the plane's manufacturer, Boeing Co., and the maker of its engines, Britain's Rolls Royce plc, as well as "intelligence superpower the United States," with access to valuable information, "should also have done a better job."
China's unusually vehement public reaction has "gone beyond the diplomatic," said Carlyle Thayer, professor at the Australian Defence Force Academy in Canberra.
"To put it in public isn't helping," he said.
The rise of social media in China and the growing willingness of prosperous urban residents to assert their rights have added to pressure on Beijing to find the missing travelers.
Beijing is pressing for information "to show it is being a responsible government to the relatives of the passengers (and) to the Chinese public," said Liu Shanying, a political scientist at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

Saturday, 15 March 2014

Missing Malaysian airlines









Kuala Lumpur: The search for the missing Malaysia Airlines passenger jet on Friday expanded to the Indian Ocean, US news reports said, amid new information gathered by US investigators that the aircraft may have flown for hours after it dropped off the radar.
Broadcaster CNN reported that the USS Kidd was steaming from the South China Sea to the Indian Ocean to conduct a search for the aircraft carrying 239 people.
The Beijing-bound flight MH370 left Kuala Lumpur International Airport early Saturday and disappeared from the radar about an hour later.
Late Thursday, White House spokesman Jay Carney said that based on "new information" investigators had received, Washington would discuss the deployment of assets with its partners.
Search for missing jet spreads across South East Asia
KUALA LUMPUR/PHU QUOC, Vietnam: The search for a missing Malaysia Airlines jetliner expanded on Wednesday to cover a swathe of Southeast Asia, from the South China Sea to India's territorial waters, with authorities no closer to explaining what happened to the plane or the 239 people on board.
Vietnam briefly scaled down search operations in waters off its southern coast, saying it was receiving scanty and confusing information from Malaysia over where the aircraft may have headed after it lost contact with air traffic control.
Hanoi later said the search - now in its fifth day - was back on in full force and was even extending on to land. China also said its air force would sweep areas in the sea, clarifying however that no searches over land were planned.
The seas off India's Andaman and Nicobar Islands are also being combed for traces of the lost jet.
"We are expanding to the east of the expected route of the flight and on land," Lieutenant General Vo Van Tuan, Vietnam's deputy army chief of staff and spokesman for its search and rescue committee, told reporters.
The confusion over where to look is adding to one of the most baffling mysteries in modern aviation history, and prolonging the agonising wait for hundreds of relatives of the missing.
Flight MH370 dropped out of sight an hour after taking off from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing early on Saturday, under clear night skies and with no suspicion of any mechanical problems.
Dozens of planes and ships have already searched tens of thousands of square miles of Malaysia and off both its coasts without finding a trace of the Boeing 777.
Adding to the frustration and uncertainty, Malaysia's military has said the plane could have turned around from its planned flight path, but there were conflicting statements and reports about how far and in which direction it could have flown after communication was lost.
OFF COURSE? Malaysia's air force chief, Rodzali Daud, denied saying military radar had tracked MH370 flying over the Strait of Malacca off the country's west coast, about 500 km (310 miles) from the point ,roughly midway between the east coast town of Kota Bharu and Vietnam, where it was last seen by air traffic control.
Malaysia's Berita Harian newspaper on Tuesday quoted Rodzali as saying the plane was last detected at the northern end of the Strait of Malacca at 2.40 a.m. on Saturday, more than an hour after it lost contact.
"It would not be appropriate for the Royal Malaysian Air Force to issue any official conclusions as to the aircraft's flight path until a high amount of certainty and verification is achieved," Rodzali said in a statement on Wednesday.
"However all ongoing search operations are at the moment being conducted to cover all possible areas where the aircraft could have gone down in order to ensure no possibility is overlooked." Indonesia and Thailand, which lie on either side of the northern part of the Malacca Strait, have said their militaries detected no sign of any unusual aircraft in their airspace.
The massive search operation involving ships and aircraft from 10 countries is spread out over the Gulf of Thailand and the South China Sea, which lie between Malaysia and Vietnam, and in the Strait of Malacca extending into the Andaman Sea.
An Indian foreign ministry official said Malaysia has sought its help in the search. India has a large military command in its Andaman and Nicobar islands and its navy patrols in the Malacca Strait.
Malaysia Airlines says no reason to think crew caused jet's disappearance
Beijing: A senior Malaysia Airlines' executive said on Wednesday that the airline has "no reason to believe" that any actions by the crew caused the disappearance of a jetliner over the weekend.
The search for the jetliner, which vanished on a flight between Kuala Lumpur and Beijing, expanded further into the Andaman and South China Seas on Wednesday, with authorities no closer to explaining what happened to the plane or the 239 people on board. With no concrete evidence to explain the plane's disappearance, authorities have not ruled out anything.
Police have said they were investigating whether any passengers or crew on the plane had personal or psychological problems that might shed light on the mystery, along with the possibility of a hijacking, sabotage or mechanical failure.
Hugh Dunleavy, the commercial director of Malaysia Airlines, said the captain in charge of the flight was a very seasoned pilot with an excellent record.
"There have been absolutely no implications that we are aware of that there was anything untoward in either his behaviour or attitude," Dunleavy told Reuters in an interview.
"We have no reason to believe that there was anything, any actions, internally by the crew that caused the disappearance of this aircraft." Dunleavy said he was sceptical of a report by a South African woman who said the co-pilot of the missing plane, Farid Ab Hamid, had invited her and a female travelling companion to sit in the cockpit during a flight two years ago, in an apparent breach of security.
"Because just getting into that area requires you to go through the secure doors that we have in the cabin all the time," he said. "And not only would that have been unusual, but it also would have meant you'd have to walk by our cabin crew as well, and have the code to get through. So I'm dubious, but I'm going to let the authorities investigate and tell us what happened."
The airline earlier said it was taking seriously the report by the woman, Jonti Roos, who said in an interview with Australia's Channel Nine TV that she and her friend were invited to fly in the cockpit by Fariq and the pilot of a flight between Phuket, Thailand, and Kuala Lumpur in December 2011. The TV channel showed pictures of the four apparently in a plane's cockpit.
The airline will give $5,000 per passenger to cover hotel expenses of relatives awaiting news, Dunleavy added. The relatives, who have been staying at hotels near a Beijing airport since the plane went missing on Saturday, have angrily accused the airline of keeping them in the dark.
Malaysia Airlines said at least 152 of the 227 passengers on flight MH370 were Chinese.