Wednesday, August 30, 2006

Lalu to teach management at IIM-A


He may be the quintessentially rustic politician whose 15-year-rule in Bihar as chief minister was dubbed by critics as 'jungle raj,' but India's Railway Minister Lalu Prasad is set for an image makeover when he dons the role of a lecturer at the Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad next month.Read More

Tuesday, August 29, 2006

Premiership and Spanish League Points Chart

Check Out Live Points Chart every week , Compare points between different teams ..


Friday, August 25, 2006

What does your browser reveal about you?

I often tend to judge people based on the type of browser they use. Believe it or not, the choice of your favorite browser reveals a lot about your personality.

IE 5.0:
You only use your computer for IM, email and Myspace. You stubbornly refuse to upgrade that ancient Win 98 box that you are using because you don’t need some fancy computer and in your opinion the one you have works just fine. You also probably don’t use antivirus or antispyware either. You just let your son/nephew/friend clean it out every month or so.

IE 6.0:
You probably don’t know what a “browser” is and you think Internet is IE. You have no clue about technology, and you are generally afraid of computers. You also use your machine only for IM, chat, email and myspace. Your friends keep telling you about that “Fried Fox” thingy but you don’t really understand this stuff and never really had time to look into it.

IE 7.0:
You consider yourself to be on the cutting edge of technology. You think that Microsoft is the greatest company on the earth, and that this evil “Lenoux” operating system is made by terrorists. You have a poster of Steve Ballmer on your wall, and you want to be like Bill Gates when you grow up. When you think about Vista you get goosebumps and shiver with excitement.

Firefox 1.x:
You are most likely a little bit geeky and proud of it. You are a strong supporter of the Open Source movement, and you think that RMS is “the man”. You really don’t care if FF is faster, or safer than IE - you would use it even if it performed 10 times worse. You are just happy that you have a free, open source browser with a huge community that is supporting it. At any given time you have installed at least 7 extensions that you couldn’t live without.

Firefox 2.0 Beta:
You are a developer by day and open source developer by night. Either that, or a huge Firefox fan. You are all over Bugzilla reporting all the issues you encounter with the browser. You have probably summited at least one patch to an open source project at some point in your life. You love to tinker with your applications, and you don’t mind running beta software on your machine. After all, it is fun to discover new bugs, and to work little kinks out of the new cutting edge programs.

Mozilla:
You have been with Mozilla since the begging. You think that Firefox is really over-hyped and you prefer the old school Netscape like environment much better. You don’t think the Moz Suite is bloated - you actually like having a mail client, irc client, and a web editor embedded in the browser. You don’t understand why people would pick a browser with less features. In all other aspects you are much like a Firefox user - you love Open Source, you are fond of your extensions and etc… Actually, no - you would rather say that Firefox users are much like you in their tastes. After all, you were using an awesome gecko powered browser while they were still struggling with their IE or whatever.

Opera:
You really don’t care for they Firefox hype. What you want is the best browser there is - and for you that’s Opera. You actually used to pay them when the browser was ad supported. If a Firefox fanboi starts talking smack about your browser you quickly shoot him down by proposing the ACID2 test. You know what you want (a fast, standards compliant browser) and you know where to get it. Browser wars do not interest you at all, although you kinda hope that Firefox wins so that fewer web developers make IE only pages.

Netscape 8.x:
You are a senior citizen, who just recently got a new computer. You don’t really understand anything about the internets, but you distinctly remember that you must have Netscape to run them. You can’t understand all that talk about Internet Explorator and Firesomething, and you have no clue what Oprah has to do with the internets. All you know is that you need to click on that big N to get to the “onlines”. You think that Senator Steven’s speech about net neutrality made a lot of sense. You also sent out an internet one day, and the other person haven’t received it for days.

Netscape 7 and below:See IE 5.0.

Tuesday, August 22, 2006

Run Ronaldo Run







Use the UP ARROW KEY to make him jump. Use the DOWN ARROW to make him duck. Collect the golden shoes as they give Ronaldo speed. Avoid the burgers and the milkshakes, they will slow him down. Get to the ball before Crespo and score.

Monday, August 14, 2006

Thursday, August 10, 2006

Top 2006 Manchester Utd Transfer Target


Following the sale of Ruud van Nistelrooy, United have been linked with some of the world's finest strikers as potential replacements.

Argentine wunderkind Carlos Tevez and Brazilian superstar Adriano are the latest big names tipped to be the subject of Sir Alex Ferguson's interest, while Fernando Torres is allegedly still arousing interest despite insisting that he will stay in Spain.

Tuesday, August 08, 2006

Chelsea Under Manchester Utd Radar...


What makes them think they’ll do any better this season?
In their eyes the league is as good as taken for granted, but the Champions League has become a must-have.

United bogeyman
More like bogey team. Chelsea have chalked up some great wins at Old Trafford in the past, but were stopped by Darren Fletcher’s winner last season.

OT connections
Sir Matt Busby played three times for Chelsea during the Second World War.

Headline maker
Andriy Shevchenko. The Ukrainian is expected to deliver lots of goals.

Under the radar
Salomon Kalou, Chelsea’s low-key summer signing. The 20-year-old slipped into SW6 without the fuss of Shevchenko or Ballack, but made a real name for himself at Feyenoord.

How will United beat them?
A win at Old Trafford is essential. Thankfully, Sir Alex is the master of setting out his team for the big occasion.

The key ins and outs
In: Andriy Shevchenko (Milan); Michael Ballack (Bayern Munich); Salomon Kalou (Feyenoord); John Obi Mikel (Lyn Oslo).

Out: Carlton Cole (West Ham); Eidur Gudjohnsen (Barcelona); Jiri Jarosik (Celtic); Glen Johnson (Portsmouth, loan).

The Gaffer: Jose Mourinho
Jose Mourinho has broken the Ferguson-Wenger double-act that dominated the early years of the Premiership. Now the three giants who have accounted for all but one of the fourteen titles since 1993 are ready to face off again. Only United have been able to claim the Premiership while reaching and winning the final of the Champions League. As Mourinho wants that very same prize above all others, this could be the season that tests him most. The pressure to deliver is on.

Vital stats
Stadium: Stamford Bridge
Capacity: 42,360
Last season: Champions
Top scorer: Frank Lampard, 20
Odds: Title 1-2, relegation 5000-1
When did they last win anything? FA Premiership, 2005-6
Last season: 1-0 (h); 0-3 (a)
United’s Premiership record against Chelsea: P28 W8 D11 L9 F35 A39

What to sing: “You should have signed for a big club…”

Monday, August 07, 2006

Electric atmosphere in friendly draw -- I was there to see barca play and practice

Ronaldhino , Messi , Saviola , Zambrotta , Eto'o , Thuram , Xavi , Puyol....phewwwww ..the enitre barcelona team ...what an experience ..check out more pictures from the training and the game .



LOS ANGELES -- Who says that soccer struggles to find its way among fans in the U.S. sporting landscape? Truth is, its foothold has been here for quite some time.

The latest evidence of this fact -- 92,650 people packed the Los Angeles Coliseum to witness the pageantry and aura that surrounds FC Barcelona, the magic of Ronaldinho and CD Guadalajara (Chivas), arguably the best-supported professional sports team in southern California, play to a 1-1 draw as part of a doubleheader that saw Chivas USA and the New England Revolution finish 90 minutes by the same scoreline in the opener.

92,650! The most fans ever to watch a club soccer match in the United States. The most people to watch a soccer match in the Coliseum. More fans than USC football games regularly gather. Flashing bulbs, lighted flares, fireworks, streamers, fans doing the wave, Kobe Bryant, L.A. mayor Antonio Villaragosa and all.

"I think it's wonderful to play in an atmosphere like this," said Barcelona coach Frank Rijkaard, the former Dutch international. "It certainly helps the players. I think you have a lot of soccer fans over here.

"It was important for us to play this game in a good ambience with a lot of people. In an ambience like this, you can't talk about it like a friendly anymore. The ambience helps to add intensity. That's a good thing."

Soccer fans certainly got a good thing Sunday afternoon in reigning European Cup champion Barcelona and reigning European Player of the Year and FIFA World Player of the Year Ronaldinho. Barcelona's first stop on its three-match U.S. tour, which continues in Houston on Wednesday vs. Club America and concludes Saturday vs. New York Red Bulls at Giants Stadium, amused and mesmerized the pro-Chivas crowd.

Interestingly enough, Chivas fans reserved their loudest ovations for two Barcelona players -- Ronaldinho and Rafael Marquez, the Mexico captain. Marquez played the first half, Ronaldinho the second. Giovanni Dos Santos, star of Mexico's U-17 world champion team, also came on for Barca in the 62nd minute to the pleasure of the Chivas fans, whom were seen roaming the streets adjacent to the Coliseum streets and tailgating in the parking lot as early as five hours before kickoff to Sunday's main event. Parking fees cost as much as $60.

Not all was perfect. The dry, patchwork field left much to be desired in hosting teams of this caliber. Barcelona no-shows on the pitch included Argentine prodigy Lionel Messi, Portuguese maestro Deco and both new signings from the sinking ship of Juventus, Lilian Thuram and Gianluca Zambrotta, who only joined the team in the last couple of days. This was to be expected given Barcelona has just begun their preseason training for the upcoming club season and is no way close to being match-fit.

However, Barca's top-five world striker Samuel Eto'o showed a few flashes of individual brilliance in playing the opening half. Left back Carlos Puyol captained the side before being removed in the 42nd minute. Holland international Mark van Bommel and French World Cup finalist Ludovic Giuly started. Spain's Andres Iniesta and Holland's Giovanni van Bronckhorst came on in the final half.

The match rose to a new level of excitement and elevated the crowd by a few decibel levels with Ronaldinho's inclusion to begin the second half. Flashbulbs provided a strobe-light sensation inside the Coliseum from the minute he jogged onto the pitch out of the tunnel and continued for at least the first five minutes of the final period. Obviously, memories of his substandard World Cup for Brazil had been forgotten.

"It was great to play in the United States," Ronaldinho said. "The reception from the crowd was exceptional."

Ronaldinho did not disappoint, showcasing many of the tricks he possess. There were backheels, no-look passes, stepovers and taking on two and three defenders in tight space.

Yet, the 74th-minute breakthrough that alleviated fears of a scoreless match was a simple pass from Ronaldinho between Chivas defenders that fell onto the foot of the Chelsea castoff Eidur Gudjohnsen, who hit the left goalpost with his initial shot but secured the rebound with a left-foot shot into an open net.

Chivas fans cheered the vision and imagination of Ronaldinho in setting up the goal but, true to their colors, cheered much louder for Chivas' 83rd-minute equalizer. Adolfo Bautista struck a perfect curling cross from the right that Diego Martinez buried with a header. Chivas played with a chippy edge from the start, as evidenced by a few late tackles, in order to let Barca know it was motivated to get a result and not be part of any dog-and-pony show.

Although only a friendly, it was a can't-miss spectacle of soccer in the U.S. A concept not as far-fetched as some would like you to believe.