Top 5 Social Network Disorders

By Sanchit on Tuesday, September 21, 2010

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Social networking funny termsSure, the rise of social networking has been good for a lot of people -- in fact, social media can even promote good health. But lately I've been able to identify some new emotional and psychological conditions that can be tied directly to my usage of social media over the past few years:



1) Unrequited Twitter Love (or UTL): The emotional state created by writing a really good Tweet or Facebook status update, but then having it crushed when nobody responds, "likes", replies or retweets your brilliant update. The UTL state is like waiting by the phone on a Friday night hoping that your boyfriend or girlfriend will call you -- but instead you're staring at Tweetdeck, wailing, "Why hasn't anyone retweeted me?" This can only be cured by the opposite of UTL -- the Sally Field-like Twitter Love (or SFTL) state -- "I've been re-tweeted! They like me! They really like me!" Related terms: Twitter Crickets, TwitsEnd, The Agony of Detweet. (thanks to @SteveBrownNI, @DDubie and @CMajor for suggested terms!)



2) Obsessive/Compulsive News Feed Checking: The need to constantly be checking your news feed or Twitter stream to see what everyone else is doing or saying, alongside the need to scroll up or down to the last point in time when you last checked the news feed, to make sure you didn't miss something important. Related condition: The guilt you feel when the cursor has reached the bottom on your TweetDeck app, and you scroll over all of the unread Tweets to get to the latest items.




3) Mayor-hogging: The need to constantly check-in via Foursquare, Gowalla, and/or Facebook Places, not because you want to tell friends where you are, but to protect your mayorship from anyone else who might be gunning for you. Also related to mayor-gunning, the attempt by non-mayors to try and steal such mayorships away from existing mayors. This is followed by depression when you realize you're never going to become mayor of your workplace or coffee shop because you keep forgetting to check in as much as the mayor does.



4) Commentitis: The condition in which you feel obligated to add meaningless comments on status updates, tweets or blog posts (such as "I agree!" or "I LOVE GLEE!!!!!!", just to show the other person that you're either paying attention to them, or that you're looking for attention for yourself. Typical sufferers are teen-aged, but we've seen cases from people who should know better. Can quickly devolve into the stalking-like state of commenting on almost every post that someone does. The worst commentitis sufferers make comments on celebrity or non-human corporate Facebook status updates.



5) Twambivalence (thanks to @Tim_Greene!): The emotional state you feel when you're reading someone's status update or Tweet, and you just don't care enough to like, respond or otherwise register any feeling. Can also be associated with anger, in which you think, "Why on earth should I care that so-and-so has a sunburn?" Hardcore cases of Twambivalence result in sufferers joining groups that state "I WILL DELETE ALL OF YOUR FARMVILLE REQUESTS", informing friends and followers that you have no time in your important life to sit through and suffer through everyone else's updates. Of course, lots of people suffering Twambivalence at the same time can create some Unrequited Twitter Love for their friends and followers.



Taken from PC World



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Drunken youths vandalise Hindu temple in Bangladesh

By Sanchit on Tuesday, September 21, 2010

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Sep 14 (IANS) Six drunken young men vandalised a Hindu temple in Gosaildanga here, provoking protests by the minority community, a newspaper reported Tuesday.

The incident occurred Saturday when the majority Muslims were observing Eid-ul-Fitr, which coincided with the Ganesh festival celebrated by the Hindus.

Led by Mohammed Masud, resident of the neighbouring Muslim-majority area, the youths stormed into the temple in the port city Saturday night. They smashed several idols, including those of Lord Narayana, and broke utensils there.

Thousands of Hindus of the area took out a procession demanding arrest of those responsible for the vandalism, the New Age newspaper said.

Mihir Das, joint general secretary of Gosaildanga Shwashan Kalibari Temple Committee, told online newspaper bdnews24.com: 'Five to six drunken youths led by gangster Masud of the neighbouring area vandalised the temple.'

Bandar police station officer-in-charge Rejaul Karim and local ward councillor Jahangir Alam Chowdhury rushed to the spot.

Hindus constitute less than ten percent of Bangladesh's predominantly Muslim population of 156 million.



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Hindus most discriminated in Pak, Bangladesh

By Sanchit on Tuesday, September 21, 2010

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Hindus in pakistan bangladesh
An American Congressman has slammed the alleged ethnic cleansing of Hindus in Pakistan, Bangladesh and Bhutan and said that Hindus have been discriminated much more than any other ethnic group in these countries.


Speaking at the Capitol Hill reception hosted by the Hindu American Foundation, California Republican Ed Royce said he had nothing but "feelings of humility and empathy for a people who have been subjected to -- despite the tolerance of their own religion and despite the way in which Hindus have treated and accepted others -- more discrimination than just about any other ethnic group." The influential lawmaker, who was presented with HAF's Friend of the Community Award for his campaign against discrimination and human rights violations of Hindus in Bangladesh, said that "as someone who has been to Bangladesh, Pakistan, to Central Asia, to South Asia and talked with many of the victims," he deplored the kind of human rights abuse they had undergone in these countries.


"There are two million Hindu Americans here in the United States, and many of them have shared their own stories with their neighbours and us in the United States," he said, and noted, "So we have some inkling of what they went through." Royce said one could just fathom the level of ethnic cleansing that had taken place in Pakistan when one considers "the fact that Pakistan was once 25 per cent Hindu." "To think about the loss of life that has occurred and to think about the ethnic cleansing that still goes on," he said was a tragedy of enormous proportions, and added, "To think about the use of intimidation against Hindu women used and still used in those societies where there is a small minority yet of Hindus in Pakistan." Royce said the same kind of blatant human rights against Hindus were occurring in Bangladesh and Bhutan and spoke of his familiarity "of what the Bangladeshi Hindu population has been through." "It cries out for the international community to step in," he said.


"I can share with you that I've made many trips to India, but I've also in these trips gone to Bangladesh and Pakistan and raised these human rights issues with those governments because it is unacceptable -- it's absolutely unacceptable -- the inhumane, intolerant way in which Hindus are treated when they are a minority in these countries in South Asia."
Royce lauded the HAF to "trying to galvanise here in the United States, not only the rights of Hindus here in the United States, but also equally importantly, the safety, the security of Hindus throughout South Asia in the face of the kind of intolerance that we see being advanced through Islamist extremism." "And, my fervent hope is that we can learn from the lesson of what has befallen other victims and begin to take the action necessary to cut off the support for the Deobandi schools, for the madrassas, which are turning out the next generation of those who are going to teach hate." Royce said it was also imperative that "we've all got to pressure the government of Pakistan to put an end to those textbooks which teach the concept that hatred should be visited upon the Hindu minority or spread the message that only one religion should be practiced in that country." "And, it's also my hope going forward that we can further our humanitarian efforts to assist those victims of the type of ethnic cleansing that is going on today," he said.


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Android v/s Iphone humourous picture

By Sanchit on Saturday, September 18, 2010

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Android v/s Iphone




Credit to original artist.


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Times of India unnecessarily trying to create friction between Hindus and Muslims

By Sanchit on Saturday, September 18, 2010

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Times of India biasedFew days ago I was browsing the net and came across the headline from the ToI's link-


" If Hindu temple okay at ground zero, why not mosque: Obama"


Naturally I was angry as to why would Obama mention the temple when majority of USA's population is Christian and Hindus were nowhere related to the incident. But since we all know how media tries to sensationalise news I read the whole article. Just read it and find out yourself what Obama said and what ToI actually wrote!



WASHINGTON: On the eve of the ninth anniversary of the 9/11 terror attacks, President Barack Obama on Friday strongly defended the building of a mosque near Ground Zero, saying that if one can build a Hindu temple then why not a mosque.

"With respect to the mosque in New York, I've been pretty clear on my position here," Obama said when asked about the controversy surrounding the construction of a mosque near the Ground Zero in the New York city.

He said the US believes in the inalienable right to allow its citizens to practice their religion freely.

"This country stands for the proposition that all men and women are created equal, that they have certain inalienable rights; one of those inalienable rights is to practice their religion freely," he argued ahead of the ninth anniversary of the September 11 terror attacks that killed nearly 300 people.

"And what that means is that if you could build a church on a site, you could build a synagogue on a site, if you could build a Hindu temple on a site, then you should be able to build a mosque on the site," Obama said.





Now Its upto people themselves whether they should still believe the money minded TRP hungry media or decide themselves what is right and what is wrong!



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1 unlikely figure who contributed a lot in making of Chandigarh but didnt get his due!

By Sanchit on Tuesday, September 14, 2010

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WHO IS HE?




Donkey



Donkey working hard



Yes you saw it right! It is indeed The Donkey who carried heavy load on his back and contributed immensely in building Chandigarh. Below is an Excerpt from ToI article-



CHANDIGARH: Le Corbusier might have dedicated Sukhna Lake and the Open Hand monument to the citizens of Chandigarh but a similar wish to pay homage to an unlikely figure — the donkey — may have died with him due to the master architect's sudden demise.

"He was so fascinated by donkeys, pressed into action while the city was being built, that he often compared himself to their lot. This was the period when he was extremely busy. He completely shunned social gatherings during his stay here," recalls MN Sharma, first Indian chief architect of Chandigarh and a close aide of Corbusier.

Sharma is, at present, penning his memoirs for the Le Corbusier Foundation. Sharma plans to name his book 'Making of Chandigarh: Le Corbusier and After.'

"At that time, it seemed he would someday build a statue of a donkey at an appropriate place in the city to pay homage to the creature that worked hard in the making of Chandigarh," Sharma told TOI.



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Religious harmony on Janamashtmi- Part 2

By Sanchit on Tuesday, September 07, 2010

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Religious harmony on Janamashtmi


A muslim vendor selling Idols of Lord Krishna.
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Religious harmony on Janamashtmi

By Sanchit on Friday, September 03, 2010

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A heartening photo amidst news of all cases of communal clashes and Religious intolerance.



Religious Harmony on Janamashtmi


A MATTER OF FAITH: A Muslim woman carries her son, dressed as Lord Krishna, for a school function on the occasion of Janmashtami, in Patna on Wednesday




Photo Credit- Times Of India


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