Sunday, May 19, 2013

Mother found-how I met your mother-cristin milliot-'the girl with yellow umbrella'

How I met your mother (himym) American comedy TV series cast on CBS since 2005.

Story in Brief:
An Architect named Ted Mosby (Josh Radnor)  lives in New York city searching his ‘sole mate’ with the help of his Wesleyan University friends, Marshall Eriksen (Jason Segel), Lily Aldrin (Alyson Hannigan) ,and  a womanizer  called Barney Stinson (Neil Patrick Harris) and TV reporter Robin Scherbatsky (Cobie Smulders).They  usually meet at a bar called Mclearen’s pub in NYC and share their great stories with  each other.

At first Ted fell in love with Robin and they dated some time and broke up. Then Ted dated several other girls but time to time he had feelings for Robin. While Barney fell in love with Robin and they engaged and going to Marry. Marshall and Lilly got married and had a baby and planning to move to Rome. Ted has a plan to move to Chicago after the wedding of Barney and Robin where he finds his sole mate the ‘the girl with yellow umbrella’

HIMYM Season finale:
At the 8th season episode 24 finally himym reviled the face of ‘the girl with yellow umbrella’ .Season 9th will be the finale of himym TV series. How I met your mother created by Carter Bays and Craig Thomas and directed by Pamela Frymen.

How I met your mother became most successful TV series of all time winning bunch of Grammy awards. 

See How I met your mother (himym) list of episodes here

the girl with yellow umbrella

ted's girl

Miss ted mosby

she is the girl himym

the future miss ted mosby

ted,josh radnor


robin,cobie smulders

baney stinson,neil patrick hariss

Marshall Erikson,Jason Segal

Lilly,Alson Haningan

Monday, May 13, 2013

Complete Sherlock Holmes e-Book Direct Download from Google Drive

221B, Baker Street, London remembering something to you? Yes.It's Sherlock Holmes a hero lived in our childhood story books.Download all Sherlock Holmes stories in one e-book now
Dr. Watson subsequently assesses Holmes' abilities thus:
  1. Knowledge of Literature – nil.
  2. Knowledge of Philosophy – nil.
  3. Knowledge of Astronomy – nil.
  4. Knowledge of Politics – Feeble.
  5. Knowledge of Botany – Variable. Well up in belladonna, opium and poisons generally. Knows nothing of practical gardening.
  6. Knowledge of Geology – Practical, but limited. Tells at a glance different soils from each other. After walks, has shown me splashes upon his trousers, and told me by their colour and consistence in what part of London he had received them.
  7. Knowledge of Chemistry – Profound.
  8. Knowledge of Anatomy – Accurate, but unsystematic.
  9. Knowledge of Sensational Literature – Immense. He appears to know every detail of every horror perpetrated in the century.
  10. Plays the violin well.
  11. Is an expert singlestick player, boxer and swordsman.
  12. Has a good practical knowledge of British law.
—Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, A Study in Scarlet Source Wikipedia
Download Complete Sherlock Holmes Ebook here

In order to download you may need to sing-in your Google account.

sherlock holmes ebook

Project Report Format


Report is the final publication of your university research work or project. Before writing a good report here are some tips about report writing that you must pay attention...

Document Styles


Font type: Times New Roman
Font color: Black
Font style: Normal
Heading Font size: 14
Body Font size: 12
Line Spacing: 1.5
Text Alignment: Left
Page Numbers: Bottom of Page Center Page
Margins: Top 1”, Bottom 1”, Left 1”,Right 1’
Page Size: A4
View: Print Layout
Header and Footer: Include if necessary
Document type: .doc(2003 format) or .docx( after 2007 format)
Any Microsoft Word 2003, 2007, 2010 or 2013

Document Writing Order


Title page
Declaration
Abbreviations
Abstract-single page, objectives, methods, results, implications
Table of contents
List of figures
Introduction
Literature review (theoretical & empirical)
Methodology (Hypothesis, variable, test models, data collection, data analysis)
Results & discussion Conclusion & implications
Bibliography or references
Appendixes

Important things to look back again

Titles, subtitles
Paragraphs
Simplicity, sentence & words Capitalization in text
Use of observations & foot notes
Use of figures-graphs histograms, pie-charts
Titles for tables & figures Refer to tables & figures in the text
Avoid repetition & duplications
Keep consistency

project-report-format

Friday, May 10, 2013

Bio-Data format SriLanka download here

This Bio-data form can be downloaded directly from Google drive or saved in your  own Google Drive.
Before download you need to sign-in to Google Account.Then click on the download icon of Google drive viewer.

Download doc file
Download pdf file

To get enlarged preview or open in Google drive viewer  click on top right arrow .

Thursday, May 02, 2013

Digital Photography School(dpf)

Most of us like to buy a smart looking digital camera but how many of us know to capture a stunning photo using the camera..On the other hand what do you know about taking photos using a digital camera?
Well It seems to be easy to click the button but hard to learn about digital photography.

I'm going to tell you the best place to learn digital photography free.It's digital photography school(dpf).
Digital Photography School site owns by  famous problogger author Darren Rowse

In  Digital Photography School you can learn:

Photography tips and tutorials

Cameras and  equipment 

Post productions

If your are a professional photographer and still searching for a place to learn digital photography you are missing the best place.

Here is quote from problogger about dpf
The last mistake I made with domains was when I started Digital Photography School in 2006.
The site was started as something of an impulsive experiment so I didn’t put a lot of thought into the domain – but I wish I had.
While having hyphens isn’t a terrible thing in terms of search engines (although lately I’m wondering if that is changing) it is a real mouthful to communicate to people when you’re telling them the domain of your site.
As with most of the above mistakes – this wasn’t a mistake big enough to sink my sites development, dPS is my biggest site today, however it is/was a regret of sorts!-Darren Rowse
 Visit dpf  and find out what you knw about digital photography.

Monday, April 29, 2013

Five Scientific Explanations

gunfire 

When wood burns it crackles.Why?
Wood contains a complex mixture of gases and tar-forming vapors trapped near the surface.These gases and tar vapors escape making a cracking sound.

When a man fires a gun, he is pushed back slightly. Why?
As a bullet leaves the nozzle of the gun ‘s barrel with momentum in a forward direction as per Newton’s third law of motion the ejection of the bullet imparts to the gun an equal momentum in a
backward direction.

If a feather, a wooden ball and a steel ball fall simultaneously in a vacuum, which one of these would
fall faster?
All will fall at the same speed in a vacuum because there will be nozzle air resistance and the earth ‘s gravity will exert and similar gravitational pull on all.

Why does and body weigh slightly more at the poles than the equator?
The gravitational pull of the earth is more at the poles because the poles being nearer to the center, the weight of a body is greater at this point.

Why is it easier to roll barrel than to pull it?
Because the rolling force of friction is less than the dynamic force of sliding friction.

Wednesday, March 20, 2013

5 Photographs That Changed The World

The invention of photography changed how we see the world. The camera’s ability to arrest a moment in time was revolutionary. Since then photography has become a part of our everyday lives and an important component in our shared history. Below are some of the images that have had the greatest impact.

Le Gras

It was 1824 when Frenchman Joseph Nicéphore Niépce took what is essentially the first ever photograph. A grainy, black-and-white image of the view from a window onto a rooftop, the picture is remarkable for its historical importance as the start of the practice of photography. Niépce used a combination of a camera obscura, a pewter plate coated in bitumen that had been dissolved in lavender oil, and a makeshift lens to make the image, which was exposed for over eight hours. The image was relatively unknown until rediscovered in the 1950s, and it was Niépce’s innovative techniques that were developed by the better known William Fox Talbot into his daguerreotypes.

The Horse in Motion

Eadweard Muybridge utilisised the camera’s ability to capture a single moment in time to such great effect that it changed human understanding of nature and movement. Designed to settle a bet about whether all four of a horse’s feet left the ground when it was running, Muybridge set up a series of 24 cameras spaced at regular intervals with trip wires that set off the shutters when a horse galloped past them. He also designed his own high-speed shutter and electronic timer that were key developments in scientific photography. Muybridge went on to make studies of other animals and humans in motion, and designed the Zoopraxiscope, a projector to animate his series of photographs. Oh, and the horses feet do all leave the ground.

Rue de Seine

Eugene Atget was a humble man, but his photographic legacy is immense. His personal project to document the buildings of old Paris before they were destroyed by modernization can be said to have started the field of street photography, which important photographers such as Henri Cartier-Bresson and Brassai would develop. Atget’s large 8 x 10 inch bellows camera enabled him to get sharp images of large buildings and street scenes. His use of silver albumen paper gives his prints a sepia tinged hue that speaks of history.

Sharecropper’s Wife

One of the most important photographs for bringing the reality of life to the attention of a wider Audience, Dorothea Lange’s image of a woman, her face creased by weather and worry, staring into the distance as her children cling to her, encapsulated the hardships of the depression on rural America. Taken in 1953 with a large box camera, the photograph was one of a series she produced under the auspices of the Farm Security Administration, an initiative that also launched the career of Walker Evans.

D-Day Landings

Robert Capa was not the first war photographer (that was Roger Fenton), but he was one of the first to show war up-close. Famously declaring that ‘If your photographs aren’t good enough, you’re not close enough,’ Capa was with the second wave of US soldiers that landed at Omaha Beach during the D-Day landings in 1944. Armed with his Contax II camera, Capa’s photographs are from the thick of the action, taken under heavy fire. He took some 106 images, however all but 11 were destroyed by a lab assistant who was rushing to develop them for publication.

by Graeme Knights
More Information:
Graeme is writing on behalf of wedding photography Surrey artist, Steven Brooks
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