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Tounge Out :p

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Hey , Why are you looking at me ?

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I am still young , you filthy animal

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Whats up ?

(CRACKED) Pro Evolution Soccer 2015 Update v1.03-RELOADED

pes-2015-pc-cover-2-www.ovagames.com

Title: Pro Evolution Soccer 2015 Update v1.03-RELOADED
Type: Game Updates
Developer: Konami
Publisher: Konami
Release Date: 02-2015
Size: 579.61 MB / Single Link Compressed
Mirrors: Mega.co.nz, MediaFire, Direct Link, Uptobox, RootTai
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System Requirement :

Minimum:

• OS: Windows Vista 32-bit SP2
• CPU: Intel Core 2 Duo E4300 1.8 GHz or Athlon II X2 240 2.8 GHz
• RAM: 1GB System Memory
• GPU RAM: 512MB Graphics Memory
• GPU: Nvidia GeForce 7800 GT or AMD Radeon X1300 XT
• DX: DirectX 9.0c
• HDD: 8 GB Free Hard Drive Space


                                        




pes-2015-update-103-pc-screenshot-www.ovagames.com-1
pes-2015-update-103-pc-screenshot-www.ovagames.com-2
pes-2015-update-103-pc-screenshot-www.ovagames.com-3


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Fallen Walkers



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Without Motivation Your Life is Nothing!


The Motivation Map
The Motivation Map
Perhaps motivation is more important in our lives than you may realize. Do you believe you would be motivated to go to work if you didn't receive a paycheck? I believe it would be fair to say that almost everything that is done in the world comes from motivation.
To stay motivated in your life is very important because when you want to achieve, or accomplish  something it takes that motivation. You may have to motivate yourself when you go to the dentist if you wish to fix a broken tooth. If you were a salesperson you may want to motivate yourself to sell more in order to earn more money.
However, to motivate yourself you must first start small to get the results you want. You do not want to have too many goals set at the same exact time.
Inspiration from other people can also help you by simply getting positive inspiration from others in order to motivate yourself. By getting excited about your goal, and to talk to your spouse, or perhaps someone else that will help you to get excited about your goal can contribute to motivating you as well.
Besides the importance of setting your goal for motivation you should not start it today, but instead build anticipation, and set a date to start your goal, and build that anticipation. Also helpful for you to continue to motivate yourself is by printing out the words of your goal in BIG WORDS, and post it where you will see it frequently.
Now nobody cares to look bad in front of another person, so commit yourself to your goal in front of others, and you'll be sure to carry it out. Additionally sometimes it's difficult to accomplish something alone without anyone else, so get some support from another person, and so they can help support you in your commitment to motivation.


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Battle Field

Give this reload animation a name! #BFHardline #Battlefield

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Giving Business Presentations Without Putting Anyone to Sleep

Giving business presentations doesn’t have to be horribly boring. If you take the time to do the proper preparation, there are several ways that you can make your presentation much more interesting and help your audience to make the decision that you would like them to make.
Before giving business presentations, you must fully prepare. The first thing to do is to create a story. This is the number one way that you will hold the attention of your audience. Giving them just a whole bunch of information with no meaning or context is extremely boring and you lose your audience. You also want to keep your presentation relevant. Figure out what decision you want the audience to make and build a case that will lead them there.
Be short and simple when creating your introduction. Something that drags on to tell all about you, your business and how you got there will just bore people. Even for a longer presentation, keep it to a sentence or two only. You’ll also want to do this with the entire length of your presentation. Cut the time in half of how long you thought it should be, or even shorter.
Start out with an eye-opening fact that will give your audience a unique perspective and that leads well into your presentation. Also, use facts instead of generalities. Make your presentation memorable and dramatic with verifiable facts.
You’ll also want to consider the type of audience you are presenting to. Customize your presentation accordingly, as each audience is different. Simplify your graphics on any slides or other pictures you use, and don’t try and use fancy, confusing backgrounds. Make sure you use simple, readable fonts as well. Don’t try and use features such as all caps, boldface or italics.
Before the presentation begins, make sure your equipment is working properly. This is the last thing you want to be fumbling with during the presentation.
Speak to your audience instead of focusing on your notes or slides. This will encourage the audience’s focus on you and the message you are giving. Also, do not ever read from your slides, as this insults the intelligence of your audience and will bore them. Don’t try to be a comedian either. When giving business presentations, there is no place for joking or polite laughter.
Another important aspect of your presentation is the time of day that you give it. Don’t try and present right before lunch, at the end of the day or the day before a holiday. Also, don’t appear disorganized by skipping around from point to point. Don’t go back to slides you already showed your audience or show slides that don’t fit into your presentation. This will ruin the credibility of the message you are trying to give.
With the proper preparation, giving business presentations can be informative and interesting for your audience and you will have a much better chance of getting your message across. 


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ABOUT TWITTER

Whenever you think of Twitter, you just feel it as another social networking site like Facebook, Google Plus etc. Although it is considered to be so and it does serve social networking purposes also, there are differences and additional functions and options in this. In an exclusive manner many serious people are attracted to tweeting. It is the very reason eminent personalities, political leaders, showbiz  personalities, religious and spiritual gurus, philosophers, students and most great organisations of all nature have started accounts in Twitter and very regularly tweeting. To name a few are Barack Obama, Bill Clinton, Amitabh Bachan, Deepak Chopra, TIME.
In the media, people are using Twitter as a publishing resource for readers and journalists. It can work as an advertising tool for information regarding interesting events and write ups published in press and blogposts. It is also a great help for people who are not usually and regularly reading periodicals or visiting web sites of news agencies.
The very tag word of Twitter is "Find out what’s happening, right now, with the people and organizations you care about." By following your favorite people of your choice of field, you can very well know their whereabouts and have up to date informations on their lives daily, hourly or even through shorter periods. Twitter is the easiest mode or media to pass on informations of private or public nature to your selected followers or whoever you want to let know. You can study and evaluate your associates by following their tweets.
As any content in Twitter is limited to 140 characters and hence concise and to the point it is easier and more convenient to access through cell phones and similar small gadgets having internet access. The procedure is also very simple on your fingertips and minimum time consuming.
It is interesting to note incidental and widely used terms like twitterer, twittering, twitterrific etc which shows the popularity of this social network among the crowd of high knowledge.


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Review: The White Tiger

Aravind Adiga was a correspondent for the newsmag Time and wrote articles for the Financial Times, the Independent and Sunday Times. He was born in Madras in 1974 and is a Mumbai-wallah now. The protagonist of his first novel is Balram Halwai, (I’m a helluva Mumbai-halwa fan, you know) who tells his story in the first person singular. Halwai has a fantastic charisma and shows you how you can climb the Indian mainstream ladder as a philosopher and entrepreneur. An Indian entrepreneur has to be straight and crooked, mocking and believing, sly and sincere, at the same time (sic). Balram’s prerogative is to turn bad news into good news, and the White Tiger, who’s terribly scared of lizards, slits the throat of his boss to attain his goal, and doesn’t even regret his deed.
In the subcontinent, however, Aravind Adiga’s novel has received sceptical critique. Manjula Padmanabhan wrote in ‘Outlook’ that it lacks humour, and the formidable Delhi-based Kushwant Singh 92, who used to write for the Illustrated Weekly of India and is regarded as the doyen of Indian English literature, found it good to read but endlessly depressing.
‘And what’s so depressing?’ you might ask. I found his style refreshing and creative the way he introduced himself to Wen Jiabao. At the beginning of each capital he quotes from a part of his ‘wanted’ poster.  The author writes about poverty, corruption, aggression and the brutal struggle for power in the Indian society. A society in which the middle class is reaching economically for the sky, in which Adiga’s biting and scathing criticism sounds out of place, when deshi Indians are dreaming of manned flights to the moon,  outer space and mountains of nuclear arsenal against China or any other neighbouring states that might try to flex muscles against Hindustan.
India is sometimes like a Bollywood film, which the poverty-stricken masses enjoy watching,  to forget their daily problems for two hours. The rich Indians want to give their gastrointestinal tract a rest and so they go to the cinema between bouts of paan-spitting and farting due to lack of exercise and oily food. They all identify themselves with the protagonists for these hundred and twenty minutes and are transported into another world with location shooting in Switzerland, Schwarzwald, Grand Canyon, the Egyptian Pyramids, sizzling London, fashionable New York and romantic Paris. After twelve songs, emotions taking a roller-coaster ride, the Indians stagger out of the stuffy, sweaty cinemas and are greeted by the blazing and scorching Indian sun, slums, streets spilling with haggard, emaciated humanity, pocket-thieves, real-life goondas, cheating businessmen, money-lenders, snake-girl-destitute-charmers, thugs in white collars and the big question: what shall I and my family eat tonight? Roti, kapada, makan, that is, bread, clothes and a posh house are like a dream to most Indians dwelling in the pavements of Mumbai, or for that matter in Delhi, Bangalore, Mangalore, Mysore, Calcutta (Read Günter Grass’s Zunge Zeigen) and other Indian cities, where they burn rubbish for warmth.
The stomach groans with a sad melody in the loneliness and darkness of a metropolis like Mumbai, a city that never sleeps. As Adiga says, ‘an India of Light, and an India of Darkness in which the black, polluted river Mother Ganga flows.’
Ach, munjo Mumbai! The terrible monsoon, the jam-packed city, Koliwada, Sion, Bandra, Marine Drive, Juhu Beach. I can visualise them all, like I was there. I spent almost every winter during the holidays visiting my uncles, aunts and cousins, the jet-set Shroffs of Bombay. I’m glad that there are people like Aravind Adiga, Salman Rushdie, Arundhati Roy and Kiran Desai who speak for the millions of under-privileged, downtrodden people and give them a voice through literature. Aravind deserves the Man Booker Prize like no other, because the novel is extraordinary. It doesn’t have the intellectual poise of VS Naipaul or Rushdie’s masala language. It has it’s own Mumbai matter-of-fact speech, a melange of Oxford and NY. And what we get to hear when we take the crowded trains from the suburbs of this vast metropolis, with its mixture of Marathi, Gujerati, Sindhi and scores of other Indian languages is also what Balram is talking about. Adiga was bold enough to present the Other India than what film moghuls and other so-called intellectuals would have us believe.
Balram’s is a strong political voice and mirrors the Indian society which wants to present Bharat in superlatives: superpower, affluent society and mainstream culture, whereas in reality there’s tremendous darkness in the society of the subcontinent. Even though Adiga has lived a life of affluence, studied at Columbia and Oxford universities, he has raised his voice in his book  against the nepotism, corruption, in-fighting between communal groups, between the rich and the super-rich, a dynamic process in which the poor, dalits, Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi’s Children of God (untouchables), ‘scheduled’ castes and tribes have no outlet, and are to this day mere pawns at the hands of the rich in Hindustan, as India was called before the Brits came to colonise the sub-continent. Balram, Adiga’s protagonist, shows how to assert oneself in the Indian society, come what may. I hope this book won’t create monsters without character, integrity, ethos, and soulless humans, devoid of values and norms. From what sources are the characters drawn? The story is in the form of a letter written by the protagonist to the Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao and is drawn from India’s history as told by a school drop-out, chauffeur, entrepreneur, a self-made man with all his charms and flaws, a man who knows his own India, and who presents his views frankly and candidly, sometimes much like P.G. Wodehouse’s Bertie Wooster. The author's attitude toward his characters is comical and satirical when it comes to realities of life for India’s poverty stricken underdogs, whether in the form of a rickshaw puller, tea-shop boy or the driver of a rich Indian businessman. His characters are alive and kicking, and it is a delight to go with Balram in this thrilling ride through India’s history, Bangalore, Old and New Delhi, Mumbai and its denizens. The major theme is how to get along in a sprawling country like India, and the author reveals his murderous plan brilliantly through a series of police descriptions of a man named Balram Halwai. The theme is a beaten path, traditional and familiar, for this is not the first book on Mumbai and Indian society. Other stalwarts like Kuldip Singh, Salman Rushdie, Amitabh Ghosh, VS Naipaul, Anita and Kiran Desai and a host of writers from the Raj have walked along this path, each penning their respective Zeitgeist. In this case, the theme is social, entertaining, escapist in nature, and the reader is like a voyeur in the scenarios created by Balaram. The climax is when the Chinese leader actually comes to Bangalore. So much for Hindi-Chini Bhai-Bhai. Unlike Kiran Desai (The Inheritance of Loss) Adiga says, “Based on my experience, Indian girls are the best. (Well second best. I tell you, Mr Jiaobao, it’s one of the most thrilling sights you can have as a man in Bangalore, to see the eyes of a pair of Nepali girls flashing out at you from the dark hood of an autorickshaw (sic).
As to the intellectual qualities of the writing, I loved the simplicity and clarity that Adiga has chosen for his novel. He intersperses his text with a lot of dialogue with his characters and increases the readability score, and is dripping with satire and humour, even while describing an earnest emotional matter like the cremation of Balram’s mother, whereby the humour is entirely British---with Indian undertones. The setting is cleverly constructed. In order to have pace and action in the story Adiga sends Balram to the streets of Bangalore as a chauffeur, and suddenly you’re in the middle of a conversation and narration where a wily driver Balram tunes in. He’s learning, ever learning from the smart guys in the back seat, and in the end he’s the smartest guy in Bangalore, evoking an atmosphere of struggle for survival in the jungles of concrete in India. Indeed, blazingly savage, this book. A good buy this autumn.

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Without Motivation Your Life is Nothing!


The Motivation Map
The Motivation Map
 
Perhaps motivation is more important in our lives than you may realize. Do you believe you would be motivated to go to work if you didn't receive a paycheck? I believe it would be fair to say that almost everything that is done in the world comes from motivation.
To stay motivated in your life is very important because when you want to achieve, or accomplish  something it takes that motivation. You may have to motivate yourself when you go to the dentist if you wish to fix a broken tooth. If you were a salesperson you may want to motivate yourself to sell more in order to earn more money.
However, to motivate yourself you must first start small to get the results you want. You do not want to have too many goals set at the same exact time.
Inspiration from other people can also help you by simply getting positive inspiration from others in order to motivate yourself. By getting excited about your goal, and to talk to your spouse, or perhaps someone else that will help you to get excited about your goal can contribute to motivating you as well.
Besides the importance of setting your goal for motivation you should not start it today, but instead build anticipation, and set a date to start your goal, and build that anticipation. Also helpful for you to continue to motivate yourself is by printing out the words of your goal in BIG WORDS, and post it where you will see it frequently.
Now nobody cares to look bad in front of another person, so commit yourself to your goal in front of others, and you'll be sure to carry it out. Additionally sometimes it's difficult to accomplish something alone without anyone else, so get some support from another person, and so they can help support you in your commitment to motivation.

0 comments