Saturday, October 10, 2009

Thursday, October 8, 2009

People in USA are waiting to NASA


Two U.S. spacecraft are set to crash on the moon Friday. On purpose. And we're all invited to watch.

NASA's Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite is scheduled to drop its Centaur upper-stage rocket on the lunar surface at 7:31 a.m. ET.

NASA hopes the impact will kick up enough dust to help the LCROSS probe find the presence of water in the moon's soil. Four minutes later, the LCROSS will follow through the debris plume, collecting and relaying data back to Earth before crashing into the Cabeus crater near the moon's south pole.

The LCROSS is carrying spectrometers, near-infrared cameras, a visible camera and a visible radiometer. These instruments will help NASA scientists analyze the plume of dust -- more than 250 metric tons' worth -- for water vapor.

The orbiting Hubble Space Telescope and NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter will watch, and photograph, the collisions. And hundreds of telescopes on Earth also will be focused on the two plumes

in down you can click on this link to watching on-line this event

>>> http://www.nasa.gov/externalflash/lcross-centaur-separation


people waiting for the event

Crazy Arabian Students explode cracker in ass

it is very funny clip for you

Crazy Arabian Students explode cracker in ass



Saturday, October 3, 2009

International plan for cheating

please watch this movie carefully

there are more than 1 million ways for cheating in school

miracle of islam

Value of Islam and Quran

please watch this movie



Friday, September 25, 2009

Scoter "weekend" nice music for you

The weekend by Scoter "the stadium techno"


hope you enjoy

Thursday, September 24, 2009

Nice Japanese Girl

OH MY GOD SHE IS VERY NICE

what is your idea ?
for see large size please click on the pictures












by : lenz zoom

3 music mixed by Basshunter (Now You're Gone)

Jonas Erik Altberg was born on 22 December 1984 in Halmstad, Sweden. He lived with his parents and younger brother near Tylösand. He started to produce music under the stage name "Basshunter" in 1999 with the computer program Fruity Loops, and released his first albums, The Old Shit (1999) and The Bassmachine (2004), through his own web site, and began working as a DJ. In April 2006, he signed with Warner Music, releasing his first single, "Boten Anna". In Scandinavia, the song became a hit instantly and was the first ever Swedish language song to reach number one on the Dutch Top 40 Chart. In 2007, Altberg released a recording titled "Now You're Gone", featuring entirely rewritten lyrics to appeal to a foreign market. The song charted at number one on the UK Singles Chart and stayed there for 4 weeks.
Throughout 2007 Basshunter worked on a new album, Now You're Gone: The Album, which was released in July 2008. Five singles were released from this album (Now You're Gone, All I Ever Wanted, Angel in the Night, I Miss You, and Walk on Water). A special edition of the album was released called Now You're Gone the album - Deluxe Edition on 5 April 2009. This featured all the content of the original album plus new remixes of I Miss You & Angel in the Night by Headhunter, along with a 7th Heaven remix of Walk On Water, and a megamix of the first four singles.

you can see 3 music mixed by Basshunter down (Now You're Gone)




Monday, August 24, 2009

Online Game SE01

Free online game for you 

Please just wait to complete loading . . .

Army of Destruction
Defend your city in this futuristic defense-thriller game!


Monday, August 17, 2009

'Racism' claims at Lebanon beach clubs


Many tourists are unaware of the beach clubs' entry policies

Summer is at its peak in Lebanon. Each weekend its famous beach clubs are heaving with people seeking some relief from the oppressive heat.

Thanks to the relative peace in the country, many clubs are now having their best season in years - with thousands of tourists joining the beachside throng. 

However, it seems not everyone is welcome at the clubs. 

The Lebanese office of campaign group Human Rights Watch says a majority of beach clubs it surveyed are preventing many migrant workers from Asia and Africa from using their facilities.

The clubs are not being quite as specific as that. 

It is alleged the bans are on household maids and domestic servants, widely employed by Lebanese families and the many Gulf Arabs among the tourists. 

As the vast majority of the maids are women from places like the Philippines, Nepal, Ethiopia and Kenya, it seems no-one can be in any doubt as to who these restrictions are aimed at. 

Restrictions enforced

"It's a clear manifestation of the racism that exists in large parts of Lebanese society," says Nadim Houry of Human Rights Watch, whose survey found that 17 out of 27 beach clubs enforce some kind of restriction on migrants. 

One of Beirut's best known and oldest beach establishments, The Sporting Club, is among those enforcing such restrictions. 

The manager, Marwan Abu Nassar, initially justified the ban on grounds that allowing in maids would attract too many children to the club. 

When it was pointed out that there is a children's pool inside the complex - and there are usually many families with youngsters there - Mr Abu Nassar eventually conceded he was operating a policy of discrimination. 

"You can call it that, if you want, from a foreigner's point of view," he said. 

Marwan Abu Nassar protested that if he started allowing in domestic maids, "we would get complaints, I would lose customers and it would affect my business". 

By contrast, other foreigners are welcomed - those from wealthier Western countries, for example. The club is popular with this group of expats though few are seemingly aware of the entry policies.

As a private club, Mr Abu Nassar said, it is up to the management to decide on the rules. 

The Sporting Club - and others with similar policies - are doing nothing illegal, as Lebanon has no law against discrimination. 

In a country still rebuilding from past conflicts and fearing the possibility of more in the future, this may not seem like a priority issue. 

Yet critics say it is symptomatic of a widespread culture of discrimination and of the abuse many of these migrants working in Lebanon suffer. 

It is thought that there are currently 200,000 domestic maids in Lebanon, the vast majority of them women from Asia and East Africa. 

Tales of mistreatment

Reports of mistreatment are commonplace. 

The story of one maid the BBC spoke to is typical. Carrie - not her real name - arrived in Lebanon three years ago at the age of 20, after being recruited in her native Philippines.

Carrie was taken on by another household but claims they beat her and after two months she ran away. She is now effectively stuck in Lebanon because that employer still has her passport. 

Every year there are reports of domestic maids in Lebanon committing suicide. 

The country's labour ministry says a new law granting migrant workers better rights is awaiting approval, once a new government is formed. 

In a statement it condemned the practice of banning maids from beach clubs as, "an act of discrimination and racism". 

The new law will be a "good sign", says MP Ghassan Mkheiber, from the Lebanese parliament's human rights committee. 

He adds that there is "a lot of racism in the way the Lebanese deal with people of different nationalities." 

Attitudes, he says, need to change.

Finally Russia finds missing cargo ship

Russia says it has found a missing cargo vessel near the Cape Verde islands and retrieved its Russian crew.

Defence Minister Anatoly Serdyukov said that the 15-member crew had been taken on board a Russian navy vessel. They were in good condition, he said. 

The Finnish-owned Arctic Sea went off radar after passing through the English Channel with its cargo of timber. 

Speculation over the cause of its disappearance had ranged from pirates to a mafia dispute to a commercial row. 

The Arctic Sea was found at 0100 Monday (2100 GMT Sunday) 300 miles (480 km) off Cape Verde in the Atlantic Ocean, Tass news agency quoted Mr Serdyukov as telling Russian President Dmitry Medvedev.

Sunday, August 16, 2009

Women 'to join Iranian cabinet'

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad says he will bring at least two women into his new cabinet - the first such appointments in Iran since the 1970s.

He told Iran TV he would propose Fatemeh Ajorlou as social security minister and Marzieh Vahid Dastjerdi as health minister, among others. 

Mr Ahmadinejad was sworn in for a second term on 5 August amid a crisis triggered by disputed polls in June. 

Meanwhile another 28 people have gone on trial over post-election unrest. 

More than 100 people are already on trial in Iran following the election, among them a number of senior politicians. 

The trials have been criticised by several foreign powers, opposition groups and human rights campaigners, but authorities insist their legal proceedings are completely legitimate and conform to international standards of justice. 

'Rightful demands'

The latest trial comes a day after Mr Ahmadinejad's main opponent in the election, Mir Hossein Mousavi, vowed to continue challenging the result in a social movement called Green Path of Hope. 

"The Green Path of Hope is formed for the sake of people's rightful demands and for claiming their rights," the reformist Etemad Melli newspaper quoted him as saying. 

Official election results awarded Mr Ahmadinejad a sweeping victory in the polls. He is expected to announce his full cabinet line-up on Wednesday. 

MPs have to approve the ministers in a confidence vote, and have warned the president that they must be "experienced", amid criticisms of his frequent reshuffles and dismissals during his first term. 

Foreign media, including the BBC, have been restricted in their coverage of Iran in the wake of the election protests.

Friday, August 14, 2009

Google adding 'Caffeine' jolt to search upgrade for challenge with microsoft


Most people would agree that a little jolt of caffeine is just what the body needs to kick into high gear and start moving a bit faster in the morning.Apparently, caffeine can have the same effect on Google Inc.'s search engine. 


Caffeine is actually the internal code name for a "secret" upgrade to Google's search technology, one the company says is designed to help users scour the Web faster, while returning more results with greater accuracy and comprehensiveness.



According to a post on the Google Webmaster Central blog, the new upgrades sit "under the hood" of the Google search engine, so most users won't immediately notice a big difference in their search results. 


"But Web developers and power searchers might notice a few differences, so we're opening up a Web developer preview to collect feedback," wrote Google software engineers Sitaram Iyer and Matt Cutts.


Although Google maintains a stranglehold on the market for Web queries both in the United States and around the world -- accounting for 65% of U.S. searches in June, according to comScore Inc. -- the Mountain View, Calif. company has recently ceded some of the search engine spotlight to Microsoft Corp.


Microsoft first earned kudos from developers and a significant amount of buzz from the online community after releasing a revamped version of its search engine, Bing, in June and then following it up by striking a deal with Yahoo Inc. to provide search technology on sites owned by the Web pioneer on July 29. 


Bing is seen by many as Microsoft's best search offering to date, while the Yahoo deal gives the world's largest software company access to about 28% of the overall search market, presenting a more formidable opponent for Google. 


Google is inviting developers to test out its technology upgrades and offer their thoughts on the differences between caffeine and Google's traditional search engine, including feedback on which sites are ranking higher or lower in the new system.


Tuesday, August 4, 2009

Iran: US nationals nabbed over 'illegal entry'


Iran's security officials confirm the arrest of three American nationals in Western city of Marivan, charging the detainees with "illegal entry". 

“The three, who have not been identified yet, were arrested on the Malakh- Khur border area in Marivan," Iraj Hassanzadeh, the deputy governor of Kurdistan for political-security affairs, told Fars news agency. 

He said the 'middle-aged' men were traveling on Syrian and Iraqi visas, noting all those who try to 'illegally' cross Iran's borders will be arrested. 

The US had earlier asked Swiss embassy in Tehran -- which looks after US interests in Iran as the two countries have no diplomatic ties -- to follow the case of the three Americans. 

A Kurdish official in northern Iraq told AFP that the US nationals were backpackers who were arrested after warnings on the Iraqi side not to hike in the mountains because of the proximity of the border with Iran. 

However, Colonel Anwar Haj Omar of the Halabja police force in northern Iraq linked the three Americans to the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), according to Voices of Iraq. 

Head of the Iranian Parliament's foreign policy committee, Alaeddin Boroujerdi, has said the case will take its natural course.

RE : Presstv

Friday, July 24, 2009

US public against Afghanistan, Iraq wars


As the Obama administration struggles to handle the conflicts in Afghanistan and Iraq, a majority of Americans are against the long-fought wars, a new poll says.

The AP-GfK Poll released on Thursday showed that 63% of respondents oppose the war in Iraq and 53% oppose the war in Afghanistan.

This is while 34% favor the Iraq battlefield and 44% favor the conflict in Afghanistan, according to the poll.

The survey also revealed that 56% of Americans approve President Barack Obama's handling of the situation in Iraq and 55% approve his handling of Afghanistan. Both numbers are down just slightly since April.

July is already the deadliest month of the war for both US and NATO forces with 63 international troops killed, including 35 Americans and 19 Britons.

Seven and half years after the US-led coalition invaded Afghanistan to allegedly root out the country's militancy US Vice-President Joe Biden in an interview with the BBC said that groups based on Afghanistan's border with Pakistan could 'wreak havoc' on the US and Europe.

"In terms of national interest of Great Britain, the US and Europe, (the war) is worth the effort we are making and the sacrifice that is being felt," he added.

The US Vice President also warned "there are more to come" and US and UK casualties could be expected to climb.

The poll has been released days after US Defense Secretary Robert Gates acknowledged that the Obama administration will risk losing public support for the war in Afghanistan if the coalition forces fail to turn the situation around within a year.

The poll was conducted July 16-20 and involved landline and cell phone interviews with 1,006 adults nationwide.
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Military practice causes devastating fire in France


One of France's worst fires for three years has raged on the eastern outskirts of Marseille burning dozens of homes.

The wildfire caused after military practice shelling hit the eastern Trois-Ponts suburb of the southern city, forcing the evacuation of scores of residents.

The fire moved down a hill outside the city and threatened the Trois-Ponts district where residents sprayed water on the outside of their houses before they moved out. People in neighboring La Barasse also left their homes, although local authorities said no evacuation order had been issued.

A thick black smoke swirled around the district and many residents angrily criticized the French Army which had staged the artillery training at its Carpiagne camp just before the fire started.

Regional Prefect Michel Sappin confirmed that the blaze had been started by the shelling, lashing out at the "imbecilic" action that had led to "an annoying and serious" situation in a zone close to a city and saying he was "exasperated."

"In such weather conditions, with high winds, the army should refrain from carrying out shelling practice," he said

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Second air crash in Iran during one month


Iran-Mashhad : Sixteen die in Aria Air plane crash in Mashhad

At least 16 people have been killed and 21 others have been injured when an Aria Air plane crash-landed in the northeastern city of Mashhad.

The plane en route to the northeastern city of Mashhad from Tehran crashed as it was attempting to make an emergency landing at the destination at about 18:00 (1430 GMT) Friday, reported Fars news agency.

The aircraft, an Ilyushin Il-62 jet, had 160 passengers and crewmembers onboard. Earlier reports had put the number of deaths at 30 and the number of injured at 20.

Images obtained by Press TV show the cockpit and front part of the fuselage completely destroyed, and the aircraft tipping back on its tail, with the main landing-gear deployed.

The aircraft' was likely to have been the UP-I6208, which indicates that it was registered in Kazakhstan.

A spokesman for the airport said that emergency services were carrying the injured to nearby hospitals, and a full breakdown of deaths and injuries will be provided later.

Post incident videos also show that one of the central emergency chutes on the left side of the cabin had been deployed.

The Il-62 is a long-range airliner with a capacity of about 185 passengers and a fair service record.

The incident comes less than 10 days after another Iranian airliner, a Tupolev-154M, crashed shortly after take-off from Tehran en route to the Armenian capital of Yerevan on July 15, killing all 168 passengers onboard. The cause of the crash has not yet been determined.

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Top 10 Most Expensive Military Planes

There are many Expensive Military planes in the world.

we can watch the picture also movie from top 10 most expensive military planes in 2009.



B-2 Spirit: $2.4 billion

The B-2 bomber was so costly that Congress cut its initial 1987 purchase order from 132 to 21. (A 2008 crash leaves the current number at 20.) The B-2 is hard to detect via infrared, acoustic, electromagnetic, visual or radar signals. This stealth capability makes it able to attack enemy targets with less fear of retaliation. In use since 1993, the B-2 has been deployed to both Iraq and Afghanistan.


F-22 Raptor: $350 million
First conceived during the Cold War as an airframe to vie with Soviet aircraft that was never built, the F-22 is touted by manufacturer Lockheed Martin as the best overall combat plane in the world — not to mention the most expensive. It can shoot down enemy cruise missiles, fly long distances at supersonic speeds and avoid nearly all types of radar detection. But the Senate debate over whether to build seven more — at a taxpayer cost of $1.67 billion — eventually came down to the plane's job-creating abilities. The axed project would have employed 25,000 Americans.


C17A Globemaster III: $328 million
The Air Force military-transport plane is used to move troops into war zones, perform medical evacuations and conduct airdrop missions. There are 190 C17As in service; the aircraft is propelled by four turbofan engines (of the same type used on the twin-engine Boeing 757) and can drop 102 paratroopers at once. In operation since 1993, it has been used to deliver troops and humanitarian aid to Afghanistan and Iraq.


P-8A Poseidon: $290 million
Boeing's spruced-up military version of its 737 jet will be used by the Navy to conduct anti-submarine warfare and gather intelligence. It can carry torpedoes, missiles, depth charges and other weapons. The P-8A is expected to go into service in 2013.


VH-71 Kestrel: $241 million
This high-tech helicopter project, intended to replace the President's aging chopper fleet, was running more than 50% over budget by the time Barack Obama took office. Soon after his Inauguration, the President announced plans to scrap the helicopters because of cost overruns. On July 22, however, the House Appropriations Committee unanimously approved restoring $485 million to fund the Kestrels.


E-2D Advanced Hawkeye: $232 million
A major step forward for surveillance and reconnaissance, the Advanced Hawkeye's powerful new radar system will increase the range of territory an aircraft can monitor by 300%. "It can probably watch the pistachios pop in Iran," an analyst for the think tank Lexington Institute told National Defense in July. Though development of the plane is on track and two test versions have been delivered to the Navy, budget cuts may keep the planes grounded for at least a year longer than planned.


F-35 Lightning II: $122 million
Lockheed Martin's 2001 deal to build these stealth, supersonic fighter jets was at the time the largest military contract ever. The F-35s, intended to replace an aging aircraft arsenal, were developed as part of a Joint Strike Fighter program between the U.S. and its allies and were criticized as underpowered and overweight — and therefore easy targets. Making matters worse, from 2007 to 2008, cyberspies infiltrated the 7.5 million lines of computer code that powered the Joint Strike Fighter, raising concerns that enemies could copy the F-35's design and exploit its weaknesses. In April 2009, Lockheed Martin said it did not believe the program had been compromised.



V-22 Osprey: $118 million
This tiltrotor aircraft, which takes off and lands like a helicopter but can fly faster and farther like a fixed-wing plane, was first used in combat in Iraq in 2007. The Osprey's production has been bedeviled by design and construction problems: the craft claimed the lives of at least 30 Marines and civilians during its development alone (former Vice President Dick Cheney tried repeatedly to ground the plane). Still, because of its range and versatility, the Marine Corps plans to deploy a squadron of V-22s to Afghanistan by the end of the year.



EA-18G Growler: $102 million
Hot off the presses, the Growler is a lightly armed version of the F/A-18 fighter that has been updated for electronic warfare (it is currently being delivered to the Navy). Growlers are capable of not only finding and disrupting anti-aircraft radar, but also jamming enemy communications.


F/A-18 Hornet: $94 million
First entering service in the 1980s, the twin-engine fighter plane was the U.S.'s first strike fighter — an aircraft capable of attacking both ground and aerial targets. It has seen action in Operation Desert Storm and as the aircraft of the Navy's Blue Angels Flight Demonstration Squadron. The F/A-18 is also used by Canada, Australia, Finland, Kuwait, Malaysia, Spain and Switzerland.
















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