Monday, November 2, 2009
WINNERS VERSUS LOSERS
¨ The Winner is always part of the answer;
The Loser is always part of the problem.
¨ The Winner always has a program;
The Loser always has an excuse.
¨ The Winner says, "Let me do it for you";
The Loser says, "That is not my job."
¨ The Winner sees an answer for every problem;
The Loser sees a problem for every answer.
¨ The Winner says, "It may be difficult but it is possible";
The Loser says, "It may be possible but it is too difficult."
¨ When a Winner makes a mistake, he says, "I was wrong";
When a Loser makes a mistake, he says, "It wasn't my fault."
¨ A Winner makes commitments;
A Loser makes promises.
¨ Winners have dreams;
Losers have schemes.
¨ Winners say, "I must do something";
Losers say, "Something must be done."
¨ Winners are a part of the team;
Losers are apart from the team.
¨ Winners see the gain;
Losers see the pain.
¨ Winners see possibilities;
Losers see problems.
¨ Winners believe in win-win;
Losers believe for them to win someone has to lose.
¨ Winners see the potential;
Losers see the past.
¨ Winners are like a thermostat;
Losers are like thermometers.
¨ Winners choose what they say;
Losers say what they choose.
¨ Winners use hard arguments but soft words;
Losers use soft arguments but hard words.
¨ Winners stand firm on values but compromise on petty things;
Losers stand firm on petty things but compromise on values.
¨ Winners follow the philosophy of empathy:
"Don't do to others what you would not want them to do to you";
Losers follow the philosophy,
"Do it to others before they do it to you."
¨ Winners make it happen;
Losers let it happen.
¨ Winners plan and prepare to win.
The key word is preparation.
pass GMAT
GMAT Material 2
GMAT Manhattan
GMAT Math OG 11 Review
GMAT Critical Reasoning
GMAT Reading & Comprehension
McGraw-Hill’s GMAT 2008 Ed. (with 6 full-length practice tests)
GMAT Useful Material
GMAT - Vocabulary List
GMAT Official Guide
GMAT - Vocabulary List[1].pdf
GMAT_Flashcards.pdf
GMAT tests1.zip
GMAT tests2.zip
A Template Approach to the GMAT Essay.doc
GMAT Maths .doc
GMAT Critical reasoning.doc
GMAT AWA strategy.doc
Spidey_GMAT_Notes.pdf
Norman Lewis's Word Power Made Easy (.zip)
OG11 (.pdf )
Popular GMAT preparation forums
Beat The GMAT Forum
GMAT Club Forum
TestMagic Forum
4GMAT Forum
English-Test
Score Top Forum
GMATxperts Forum
Sunday, November 1, 2009
Lets discuss about the clothes,we want to wear.
I don't care for the clothes i wear.I used to wear what is not torned out too much and which doesn't shows vulgurity,or which cover bodies & save from harash environment.I realy don't want to care for my clothes.Actually clothes only make a man handsome in looking which is really a vogous concept according to me.NO BRAND but SEXY WOULD WORK.i only say that"Brand doesn't work I work".
Now its yur time what u think abt cloths u wear.post here.i am waitin !!
Friday, October 23, 2009
YEH MERA INDIA - A NICE SOCIAL REALISTIC DRAMA
Genre: sOCIAL
Rating: ***/****
This movie really depicting the relation between mystic social condition of india & its development.indian life is full of crime & hatred.Noone is believing others.everyone is hatred of each other.every group is hatred of other group.no language in india is used all over india.
with so much disturbance india is developing....developing in every field.Although everywhere is problem,everyone is happy.everyone is believing in something & this something is god.
crushing dialog
"every1 makes mistakes"
"sabse pehle bachhe apne maa-baap ki nakal sikhte hai,fir duniya ki"
"bihar bhi to hindustan me hai"
"our country is changing step by step.keep patience"
"roko roko roko roko ... .......... ........... .. ............"
value of india to this world.
Saturday, October 10, 2009
Improve Your Memory
Can’t remember names, dates – or even why you walked into a room? Luckily, there are lots of things you can do to increase your memory power.
Spring for organic grape juice; organic fruits and vegetables have 40% more antioxidants than non-organic ones.
Need to remember a name? Picture it written across the person’s forehead; the visual image will help you remember it later. This was a favorite trick of Franklin Roosevelt, who was renowned for his ability to remember names.
Repeat whatever you need to memorize – a name, an address, a phone number – when you first hear it. Saying it out loud helps lock it into your memory.
If you’re trying to memorize something, do it on an empty stomach. The hormone that improves memory is highest when the stomach is empty.
Be a social butterfly. One study found that people who socialize regularly do far better on memory tests than their less outgoing counterparts, since participating in conversations exercises the brain.
The average person forgets 30% of what he’s heard after 20 minutes, and 50% of what he’s heard within half an hour!
Sunday, August 9, 2009
Live your Life
sometime on the way you are going you might think its a worst time in my life but you know where at the end of row you avoid adversely you can give what you want to be.you remember whatever on key you make strong to avoid adversity adversily on the way to top you can do anything perhaps you get your life back you have to get to.
yeah smart to learn.
Log on to the power of ideas
why is innovation suddenly gaining such currency?Innovation-led growth, innovation-led recovery, innovation-led competitiveness all these are not mere slogans they are a hard reality.
Innovation is all about converting ideas into new or improved products, processes and services. India's world ranking on innovation is low. According to a survey, among 130 countries, India is ranked only 41 in the innovation index.Even Malaysia (25) and China (37) are ahead of India. Singapore and Korea are in the top 10.
- Ashok Jhunjhunwala of IIT, Madras, develops the wireless local loop technology. It gets implemented first in Madagascar, Angola and Brazil before it does so in India!
- The Council of Scientific and Industrial Research's New Millennium Indian Technology Leadership Initiative gave the challenge and funding for the creation of a low-cost computer to entrepreneur Vinay Deshpande, who created a mobile personal computer. But the first such PC will be produced this year in Malaysia and Brazil and not in India.
- Due to the limitations in India's patent laws, the phytopharmaceutical breakthrough medicine on psoriasis by an Indian company will be commercialised first in the West, not in India. And one can go on.
Research in typically Indian innovation has brought out how some Indians can make the seemingly impossible possible.
Why do we fail in completing the journey from an Indian mind to an Indian marketplace? Because India lacks a robust national innovation ecosystem. The essential elements of a powerful ecosystem comprise physical, intellectual and cultural constructs. Beyond mere research labs it includes idea incubators, technology parks, a conducive intellectual property rights regime, enlightened regulatory systems, academics who believe in not just 'publish or perish', but 'patent, publish and prosper', potent inventor-investor engagement, adventure capital and passionate innovation leaders.
Such and other recent path-breaking events compel me to make five suggestions to kickstart the 'Indian decade of innovation'.
- First, change the 'ministry of science & technology' to 'ministry of science & innovation', boldly bringing the innovation agenda upfront.
- Second, create an ambitious national innovation policy, going way beyond our science and technology policy (2003).
- Third, set up a powerful mechanism to implement this policy by creating a National Innovation Council comprising world-class innovation leaders. Make the council autonomous, empowered and accountable. Give it the mandate of putting India among the top 10 innovative nations within this 'decade of innovation'.
- Fourth, drive inclusive growth by launching an 'Indian Inclusive Innovation Initiative' based on the tenets of Gandhian engineering.
- Fifth, launch a national innovation movement like our freedom movement, so that innovation becomes every Indian's obsession.