Friday, 8 June 2012

Fastest cars in the world(12 fastest cars till now)

12). Pagani Zonda Cinique Roadster


The Zonda Cinque might be a limited edition variant but it has unlimited performance. Using an AMG sourced twin turbocharged V12 engine that produces 678 HP of power, the Zonda Cinque hits the 100 kmph mark in 3.5 seconds and on to a top speed of 348 kmph.

11). Lamborghini Aventador


This Italian bull uses a massive 6.5-litre V12 motor to produce 700 PS of power. 0 to 100 kmph comes up in shade under 3 seconds, while top speed is 349 kmph.

10). Ascari A10


The A10 uses BMW's S62 V8 engine which is a 5.0-litre unit producing 625 HP. 0 - 100 kmph comes up in 2.9 seconds, while top speed is 350 kmph.

9). Aston Martin one-77


This limited edition beauty is a beast on the road with its 7.3-liter V12 engine producing 750 HP of power. 0 to 100 kmph comes up in 3.4 seconds while top speed is 354 kmph.

8). Noble M600


Using a 4.4-litre V8 engine, the M600 has twin-turbochargers and 650 HP under the hood, which propels it to 100 kmph in 3.8 seconds. Top speed is 360 kmph.

7). Koenigsegg CCX


The CCX uses a 4.7-litre, V8 engine to produce 806 HP of power and reaches 100 kmph in 3.2 seconds. Top speed is 395 kmph. You only need 29.2 seconds to go from 0 - 300 kmph in the CCX.

6). Gumpert Apollo


Designed to run upside down in a tunnel at a speed of 300 kmph, the Apollo uses a 4.2-liter V8 engine to produce 650 HP. 0 - 100 kmph comes up in 3.1 seconds while top speed is 362 kmph.

5). McLaren F1


This is the oldest car in the list but still one of the best. Using a BMW M developed 6.1-litre V12 engine, the F1 produces 627 HP of power and reached 100 kmph in just 3.3 seconds. Top speed is 386 kmph.

4). Saleen S7


This sports car is powered by a V8 engine made of complete aluminium and uses twin-turbos to produce 750 HP. 0 - 100 kmph comes up in 2.9 seconds while top speed is pegged at a whisker under 400 kmph.

3). SSC Ultimate Hero


The fastest car in the world at one point of time, the Ultimate Aero is now number 3 and is powered by a twin-turbo V8 motor that produces 1183 HP. 0 - 100 kmph comes up in 2.8 seconds, while the top speed is 414 kmph.

2). Koenigsegg Agera R


The second fastest car is the Agera, which is powered by a 5.0-litre V8 twin-turbo engine, producing 1099 hp of power. 100 kmph comes up in 3 seconds while top speed is 418 kmph.

1). Buggati Veyron Super Sport


On the top of the list is the Veyron which uses a 8-litre, W16, turbocharged engine that produces 1200 hp of power. The Veyron zooms from a standstill to 100 kmph in a matter of 2.5 seconds and onto a top speed is 430 kmph.

Monday, 21 May 2012

Pictures of seven wonders of ancient world

1). GREAT PYRAMID OF GIZA
       The Great Pyramid of Giza as built as a tomb for Egyptian Pharaoh Khufu over a 20-year period concluding around 2560 BC. It consists of an estimated 2.3 million limestone blocks transported from nearby quarries. The limestone blocks used for the casing was quarried across the river Nile. The gigantic granite stones found in the King’s chamber weigh 25 to 80 tons and were transported from Aswan, more than 500 miles away. At 146.5 meters (480.6 ft), the pyramid was the tallest man-made structure in the world for over 3,800 years. The Great Pyramid at Giza is the oldest of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World, and the only one to have survived the wrath of time. Or, as an Arab proverb goes: “Man fears time, but time fears the Pyramids.”

                                                  2). COLOSSUS OF RHODES
       Built between 292 and 280 BC, the Colossus of Rhodes was a giant statue of the Greek god Helios, ruled in the city of Rhodes. The Colossus was made of bronze and iron and stood over 30 meters (107 ft) high, making it one of the tallest statues of the ancient world. It was the last of the seven wonders to be completed but the first to be destroyed, by an earthquake in 226 BC. The statue snapped at the knees and fell over on to the land. The pharaoh of Egypt offered to pay for the reconstruction of the statue, but the oracle of Delphi made the Rhodians afraid that they had offended Helios, and they declined to rebuild it.

3). HANGING GARDENS
       The Hanging Gardens of Babylon are the most mysteries of the seven wonders. Some historians even question whether the Hanging Gardens were an actual creation or a poetic creation due to the lack of documentation of them in the chronicles of Babylonian history. Supposedly , the gardens were built by the Babylonian king Nebuchadnezzar II around 600 BC. He is reported to have constructed the gardens to please his homesick wife who longed for the trees and plants of her homeland Persia. Diodorus Siculus described multi-leveled gardens reaching 22 meters (75 feet) high, complete with machinery for circulating water. The gardens were destroyed by several earthquakes after the second century BC.

4). TEMPLE OF ARTEMIS
       The Temple of Artemis at Ephesus was a Greek temple dedicated to Artemis, the goddess of hunt, wild animals and a lot of other things. It took 120 years to built and was finally finished around 550 BC. Built of marble, it was the favorite wonder of Antipater of Sidon. A young man called Herostratus burned the temple down on July 21, 356 BC to achieve lasting fame. The outraged Ephesians sentenced Herostratus to death and forbade anyone from mentioning his name, which apparently didn’t work out very well. That very same night, Alexander the Great was supposedly born. The temple was restored, destroyed by the Goths, and restored again. In 401, the temple was finally destroyed by a mob led by the Archbishop of Constantinople.

5). LIGHTHOUSE OF ALEXANDRIA
       The Lighthouse of Alexandria was built between 280 and 247 BC on an island at Alexandria to guide sailors into the harbor at night. Constructed from large blocks of light-colored stone, the lighthouse was made up of three stages: a lower square section with a central core, a middle octagonal section, and, at the top, a circular section. With a height estimated between 120 and 140 meters (390–460 ft), it was among the tallest structures on Earth for many centuries. The lighthouse was badly damaged by several earthquakes and disappeared completely in 1480, when the Sultan of Egypt built a fort on the site of the lighthouse, using some of the fallen stones. The name of the island that it was built on, Pharos, eventually became the Latin word for lighthouse.

6). STATUE OF ZEUS AT OLYMPIA
       The Statue of Zeus at Olympia was made by the Greek sculptor Phidias around 432 BC. The seated statue, some 12 meters (43 feet) tall, was so large that “if Zeus were to stand up he would hit the roof of the temple it was housed in”. The sculpture seated on a magnificent throne of cedarwood, inlaid with ivory, gold, ebony and precious stones. In Zeus’ right hand there was a small statue of a crowned Nike, goddess of victory, and in his left hand, a golden scepter on which an eagle perched. The circumstances of its eventual destruction are a source of debate: it was either carried off to Constantinople, where it was destroyed in a fire in 475 or the statue perished with the temple when it burned in 425.

7). MAUSOLEUM AT HALICARNASSUS
       The Mausoleum at Halicarnassus was built between 353 and 350 BC for Mausolus, a governor in the Persian Empire. After Mausolus died Artemisia, his wife and sister, (a custom in the region to keep the power and the wealth in the family) decided to build him the most splendid tomb, a structure so famous that the word Mausolus’s name is now the eponym for all grand tombs, in the word mausoleum. The construction was also so beautiful and unique that Antipater of Sidon put it on his original wonders of the world list. Artemisia lived for only two years after the death of her husband. The urns with their ashes were placed in the yet unfinished tomb. The mausoleum was destroyed by a series of earthquakes in the 15th century. The remaining stones were used to built the massive Bodrum Castle.

Friday, 24 February 2012

WORLD's NEXT TALLEST BUILDING(taller than "burj khalifa")


Burj Mubarak al-Kabir 



   The war is on for who constructs the tallest building in the world. On one hand you have the Burj Dubai, which is supposed to be over 800 meters; the actual height has not been disclosed and as they are in mid-construction, they may add on a bit to up the ante. The other hand sees the Burj Mubarak Al-Kabir coming up in the City of Silk or Madinat al-Hareer. This city outside a city is coming up in Kuwait. Burj Mubarak Al-Kabir will stand 1,001 meters (3,284 ft).

   Kuwait joins the race to build the world's tallest building after Kuwait's Municipal Council on Wednesday approved drawing sketches of Madinat al-Hareer.

   Madinat al-Hareer (Arabic: مدينة الحرير, meaning "City of Silk"), is a proposed 250 square kilometer planned urban area in Subiya, Kuwait, an area just opposite Kuwait City which, upon construction, would include the Burj Mubarak al-Kabir , the world's tallest structure, a natural desert reservation of 2 square kilometres, a duty free area which will be beside a new airport, in addition to a large business center, conference areas, environmental areas, athletic areas, and areas that concentrate on media, health, education, and industry. The City of Silk will also include numerous tourist attractions, hotels, spas, and public gardens. As of this time, it is unclear as to the scope of this project, if it has received any approvals, or if it has the required funding; however, the city will be built in individual phases with total completion within twenty-five years. The development will cost an estimated 25 billion Kuwaiti Dinars (86.1 billion USD). Burj Mubarak al-Kabir should not be confused with the Al Jaber Tower proposed by the famous Italian architect Amero Marchetti, part of the planned "ethic city". If built the Al Jaber Tower would reach 1852 meters.
   
   The City will be linked to Kuwait City by a causeway which will stretch across Kuwait Bay to make the driving time to the City of Silk from Kuwait City 23 mins.

The city will be composed of 4 main districts which are:

   1) The Financial District: will be located on the new coastal road and will be facing Kuwait City. This will be the CBD of the City of Silk and will be next to a new International Airport. The distrcit will of course contain the centrepiece tower, Mubarak Tower.

   2) The Entertainment District: will be facing a channel connecting the Euphrates and Tigris Rivers with the gulf. This district will contain resorts, hotels and entertainment villages.
The district will also contain a sports complex, a centre for sports medicine, a sports academy and water sports which will be found all along the channel.

   3) The Cultural District: will be located on the peninsula of the northern shore of Kuwait Bay. Over here there will be a centre for research and studies of ancient artefacts, a historical museum and an arts centre.
This district will be subdivided into 3 areas for academic, diplomatic and political studies.

   4) The Environmental District: will be located at the heart of the city with an area of 45 km2. This district will be part of the Bird Reserve for migrating birds from Africa to Central Asia. There will also be an Environmental Research Center for the scientific research of plant life and animal life of the region. It will also include an extended network of a university and a health resort.

   The entire city will be surrounded by an emerald belt which will contain ponds, lakes and parks which will ensure that no one is except a couple of steps away from the emerald belt.

   This project will be controlled by public shareholding companies where a part of these companies will be owned by the government and another part will be owned by the private sector and a large part will be filed for an IPO.


   Kuwait joins the race to build the world's tallest building after Kuwait's Municipal Council on Wednesday approved drawing sketches of Madinat al-Hareer. Madinat al-Hareer (meaning "City of Silk"), is a proposed 250 square kilometer planned urban area in Subiya, Kuwait, an area just opposite Kuwait City which, upon construction. The area will include Burj Mubarak al-Kabir witch will stand at 1,001 m tall almost twice the height of Taipei 101, officially still the world's tallest building.


Height 1,001 m (3,284 ft)
Height to roof 900 m
Height to top floor 897 m
Floors 250

comparison of some world's tallest buildings
   Mubarak Tower will be 1001 m high and will form the landmark for this new city. The tower was inspired by the 1001 nights story and the desert plant life. The tower will be composed of 7 vertical villages which will consist of hotels, offices, residences and entertainment facilities.


Friday, 17 February 2012

MOST POPULAR RELIGIOUS GROUPS(source: wikipedia)

15. TENRIKYO
No. of  followers(in millions) :  2
Culture                                     :  JAPANESE religion
Regions covered                    :  Japan,Brazil






14. SPIRITISM
No. of  followers(in millions) :  2.5
Culture                                     :  HUMANISM
Regions covered                    :  Brazil







13. CHENODOISM
No. of  followers(in millions) :  3
Culture                                     :  KOREAN religion
Regions covered                    :  South & North Korea







12. CAO DAI
No. of  followers(in millions) :  3.1
Culture                                     :  VIETNAMESE religion
Regions covered                    :  Vietnam






11. BAHA'i FAITH
No. of  followers(in millions) :  7.6-7.9
Culture                                     :  ABRAHAMIC religion
Regions covered                    :  in small patches of U.S.,Vietnam,Kenya,DR of Congo,Iran.







10. JAINISM
No. of  followers(in millions) :  8-12
Culture                                     :  INDIAN religion
Regions covered                    :  India & East Africa







9. JUDAISM
No. of  followers(in millions) :  14-18
Culture                                     :  ABRAHAMIC religion
Regions covered                    :  Israel and other patches around the world







8. SIKHISM
No. of  followers(in millions) :  24-28
Culture                                     :  INDIAN religion
Regions covered                    :  India, Canada, Australia, north america, southeast Asia, U.K., Europe and in other minorities worldwide.







7. SHINTO
No. of  followers(in millions) :  27-65
Culture                                     :  JAPANESE religion
Regions covered                    :  Japan







6. CHINESE  FOLK  RELIGION
No. of  followers(in millions) :  400-500
Culture                                     :  CHINESE religion
Regions covered                    :  East Asia, Vietnam,Singapore, Malaysia







5. FOLK RELIGIONS
No. of  followers(in millions) :  400-500
Culture                                     :  FOLK religions
Regions covered                    :  Asia,Africa,America







4. BUDDHISM
No. of  followers(in millions) :  500-700
Culture                                     :  INDIAN religion
Regions covered                    :  South Asia, East Asia, Australia, Japan, Singapore, Thailand   and some parts of Russia.







3. HINDUISM
No. of  followers(in millions) :  828-1000
Culture                                     :  INDIAN religion
Regions covered                    :  South Asia, Bali, Mauritius, Fiji, Guyana, Trinidad, Suriname        and all over the world with considerable large patches specially overseas(western countries).







2. ISLAM
No. of  followers(in millions) :  1300-1650
Culture                                     :  ABRAHAMIC religion
Regions covered                    :  Middle East, Northern Africa, Central Asia, South Asia, Western Africa, Malay Archipelago with large population centers existing in Eastern Africa, Balkan Peninsula, Russia and China.







1. CHRISTIANITY
No. of followers(in millions) :  2000-2300
Culture                                     :  CHRISTIAN religion
Regions covered                    :  Predominant in western world,Sub-Saharan Africa, Philippines, South-East Asia and in minorities in various countries. 

Sunday, 12 February 2012

intresting: MOST DISGUSTING FACTS

intresting: MOST DISGUSTING FACTS: - In an average day, our hands will come into indirect contact with penises(by touching doors,handles etc) . - Daily we bre...

Saturday, 11 February 2012

MOST DISGUSTING FACTS(strange facts)

- In an average day, our hands will come into indirect contact with penises(by touching          
   doors,handles etc) .


- Daily we breathe about 1 litre of other people's anal gas(yakkkk).


- Annually we'll shake hands with 6 men who have recently masturbated and forget to     
   wash hands.


- In a year, we've swallowed approximately 15 insects while we sleep.


- Again, annually we'll shale hands with 11 women who have recently masturbated and     
   failed to wash their hands.


- On an average, during our fast food intake, we accidentally swallow approx. 12-13   
   pubic hairs, isn't it disgusting...??


- During an hour's swimming in muncipal pool we are likely to ingest 1/12 litre of 
   urine(now I won't ever go to swim).



Tuesday, 7 February 2012

UNKNOWN FACTS(interesting)



-The Statue of Liberty's index finger is eight feet long.

-A 75 year old person will have slept about 23 years.

-Boeing 747's wing span is longer than the Wright brother's first flight who invented the airplane.

-There are as many chickens on earth as there are humans. 

-One type of hummingbird weighs less than a penny.

-Sharks can live up to 100 years.

-Mosquitos are more attracted to the color blue than any other color.

-Kangaroos can't walk backwards.

-The largest recorded snowflake was 15 Inch wide and 8 Inch thick. It fell in Montana in 1887.

-The tip of a bullwhip moves so fast that the sound it makes is actually a tiny sonic boom.

-Former president Bill Clinton only sent 2 emails in his entire 8 year presidency.

-Koalas and humans are the only animals that have finger prints.

-There are 200,000,000 insects for every one human.

-It takes more calories to eat a piece of celery than the celery had in it to begin with.

-The world's largest Montessori school is in India, with 26,312 students in 2002.

-Octopus have three hearts.

-If you ate too many carrots, you would turn orange.

-The average person spends two weeks waiting for a traffic light to change.

-The human body has 2-3 million sweat glands.

-Sperm whales have the biggest brains; 20 lbs(8.7 kg).

-Tiger shark embryos fight each other in their mother's womb. The survivor is born.

-Most cats are left pawed.

-250 people have fallen off the Leaning Tower of Pisa.

-A Blue whale's tongue weighs more than an elephant.

-Bamboo can grow up to 3 ft in 24 hours.

-An eyeball weighs about 1 ounce.

INTERESTING FACTS



You gotta read this guyz, its really interersing.......!!!!!!!


-If Barbie were life-size her measurements would be
 39-23-33. She would stand seven feet, two inches tall and
 have a neck twice the length of a normal human's neck.


-Our eyes are always the same size from birth,
 but our nose and ears never stop growing.

-If you yelled for 8 years, 7 months and 6 days, you would
 have produced enough sound energy to heat one cup of coffee.

-Only one person in two billion will live to be 116 or older.

-You know that you are more likely to be killed
 by a champagne cork than by a poisonous spider.

-The cruise liner, Queen Elizabeth II,
 moves only six inches for each gallon of diesel that it burns.


-The most common name in the world is Mohammed.

-Babies are born without knee caps.
 They don't appear until the child reaches 2-6 years of age.


-Cat's urine glows under a black light.

-Leonardo Da Vinci invented the scissors.

-In the last 4000 years, no new animals have been domesticated.


-Americans on the average eat 18 acres of pizza every day.

-"I am."
 is the shortest complete sentence in the English language.

-The longest word in the English language is 1909
 letters long and it refers to a distinct part of DNA.

-It's impossible to sneeze with your eyes open.

-Feb 1865 is the only month in recorded history
 not to have a full moon.
-Banging your head against a wall uses 150 calories an hour.

-The electric chair was invented by a dentist.

-We share your birthday with at
 least 9 other million people in the world.





Monday, 6 February 2012

USEFUL "SHORCUTS FOR WINDOWS"

These shortcuts may be useful to windows 7 also.
General Shortcuts:
Start + M: Minimizes all open windows
Start + Shift + M: Maximizes All Windows
Start + E: Runs Windows Explorer
Start + R: Open the RUN Dialog Box
Start + F: Open the Search Results Dialog box
Start + CTRL + F: Opens the Search Results-Computer dialog Box (if the computer is connected to a network)
Start + Pause (Break): Opens the System Properties Dialog Box


Windows System Key Combinations:F1: Help
CTRL + ESC: Open Start menu
ALT + TAB: Switch between open programs
ALT + F4: Quit program
SHIFT + DELETE: Delete item permanently


Windows Program Key Combinations:CTRL + C: Copy
CTRL + X: Cut
CTRL + V: Paste
CTRL + Z: Undo
CTRL + B: Bold
CTRL + U: Underline
CTRL + I: Italic


Mouse Click/Keyboard Modifier Combinations for Shell Objects:SHIFT + right click: Displays a shortcut menu containing alternative commands
SHIFT + double click: Runs the alternate default command (the second item on the menu)
ALT + double click: Displays properties
SHIFT + DELETE: Deletes an item immediately without placing it in the Recycle Bin



General Keyboard-Only Commands:
F1: Starts Windows Help
F10: Activates menu bar options
SHIFT + F10: Opens a shortcut menu for the selected item (this is the same as right-clicking an object
CTRL + ESC: Opens the Start menu (use the ARROW keys to select an item)
CTRL + ESC or ESC: Selects the Start button (press TAB to select the taskbar, or press SHIFT+F10 for a context menu)
ALT + DOWN ARROW: Opens a drop-down list box
ALT + TAB: Switch to another running program (hold down the ALT key and then press the TAB key to view the task-switching window)
SHIFT: Press and hold down the SHIFT key while you insert a CD-ROM to bypass the automatic-run feature
ALT + SPACE: Displays the main window's System menu (from the System menu, you can restore, move, resize, minimize, maximize, or close the window)
ALT +- (ALT + hyphen): Displays the Multiple Document Interface (MDI)child window's System menu (from the MDI child window's System menu, you can restore, move, resize, minimize, maximize, or close the child window)
CTRL + TAB: Switch to the next child window of a Multiple Document Interface (MDI) program
ALT + underlined letter in menu: Opens the menu
ALT + F4: Closes the current window
CTRL + F4: Closes the current Multiple Document Interface (MDI) window
ALT + F6: Switch between multiple windows in the same program (for example, when the Notepad Find dialog box is displayed
ALT + F6: switches between the Find dialog box and the main Notepad window)



Shell Objects and General Folder/Windows Explorer Shortcuts For a selected object:F2: Rename object
F3: Find all files
CTRL + X: Cut
CTRL + C: Copy
CTRL + V: Paste
SHIFT + DELETE: Delete selection immediately, without moving the item to the Recycle Bin
ALT + ENTER: Open the properties for the selected object
To Copy a File: Press and hold down the CTRL key while you drag the file to another folder.
To Create a Shortcut: Press and hold down CTRL+SHIFT while you drag a file to the desktop or a folder.



General Folder/Shortcut Control:F4: Selects the Go To A Different Folder box and moves down the entries in the box (if the toolbar is active in Windows Explorer)
F5: Refreshes the current window.
F6: Moves among panes in Windows Explorer
CTRL + G: Opens the Go To Folder tool (in Windows 95 Windows Explorer only)
CTRL + Z: Undo the last command
CTRL + A: Select all the items in the current window
BACKSPACE: Switch to the parent folder
SHIFT + click + Close button: For folders, close the current folder plus all parent folders


Windows Explorer Tree Control:
Numeric Keypad *: Expands everything under the current selection
Numeric Keypad +: Expands the current selection
Numeric Keypad -: Collapses the current selection.
RIGHT ARROW: Expands the current selection if it is not expanded, otherwise goes to the first child
LEFT ARROW: Collapses the current selection if it is expanded, otherwise goes to the parent


Accessibility Shortcuts:Press SHIFT five times: Toggles StickyKeys on and off
Press down and hold the right SHIFT key for eight seconds: Toggles FilterKeys on and off
Press down and hold the NUM LOCK key for five seconds: Toggles ToggleKeys on and off
Left ALT + left SHIFT+NUM LOCK: Toggles MouseKeys on and off
Left ALT + left SHIFT+PRINT SCREEN: Toggles high contrast on and off


Microsoft Natural Keyboard Keys:Windows Logo: Start menu
Windows Logo + R: Run dialog box
Windows Logo + M: Minimize all
SHIFT + Windows Logo+M: Undo minimize all
Windows Logo + F1: Help
Windows Logo + E: Windows Explorer
Windows Logo + F: Find files or folders
Windows Logo + D: Minimizes all open windows and displays the desktop
CTRL + Windows Logo + F: Find computer
CTRL + Windows Logo + TAB: Moves focus from Start, to the Quick Launch toolbar, to the system tray (use RIGHT ARROW or LEFT ARROW to move focus to items on the Quick Launch toolbar and the system tray)
Windows Logo + TAB: Cycle through taskbar buttons
Windows Logo + Break: System Properties dialog box
Application key: Displays a shortcut menu for the selected item


Microsoft Natural Keyboard with IntelliType Software Installed:Windows Logo + L: Log off Windows
Windows Logo + P: Starts Print Manager
Windows Logo + C: Opens Control Panel
Windows Logo + V: Starts Clipboard
Windows Logo + K: Opens Keyboard Properties dialog box
Windows Logo + I: Opens Mouse Properties dialog box
Windows Logo + A: Starts Accessibility Options (if installed)
Windows Logo + SPACEBAR: Displays the list of m*cro$oft IntelliType shortcut keys
Windows Logo + S: Toggles CAPS LOCK on and off


Dialog Box Keyboard Commands:TAB: Move to the next control in the dialog box
SHIFT + TAB: Move to the previous control in the dialog box
SPACEBAR: If the current control is a button, this clicks the button. If the current control is a check box, this toggles the check box. If the current control is an option, this selects the option.
ENTER: Equivalent to clicking the selected button (the button with the outline)
ESC: Equivalent to clicking the Cancel button
ALT + underlined letter in dialog box item: Move to the corresponding item


use'em up to boost ur working speed.....!!!!!

Tuesday, 31 January 2012

BIZZARE DOG FACTS



  • 22 reported dog bite related human fatalities in the United States in 2004, 2007 - 29 human fatalities, 2008 - 26. In 2009, there were 33 human fatalities. 45% of the attacks occurred to adults over the age of 18, and 55% occurred to ages below. Pit bull type dogs were responsible for 67% of fatalities, the next closest breed was the rottweiler at 12%. But all dog breeds are potentially dangerous. In 2000, the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) reported that 25 breeds of dogs were involved in 238 fatal dog bites from 1979-1998.
  • For each US dog bite fatality there are about 670 hospitalizations and 16,000 emergency room visits, 21,000 other medical visits (office and clinic), and 187,000 non-medically treated bites.
  • 46.1% (nearly half) of dog bite injuries were triaged in emergency rooms as "urgent-emergent" .
  • Dog bites are the second highest reason why children seek emergency treatment 
    That's about 60,000 bites per fatality and that information is dated. It is reported today that a US citizen is bitten by a dog every 75 seconds.

Monday, 30 January 2012

TOP 10 MOST DANGEROUS DOGS IN THE WORLD



10. Dalmatian(wt: 18-31 kgs)



      This breed is distinguished by intelligence and perfect memory, independence and survival instincts. Sometimes Dalmatians can be aggressive towards people.



9. Boxer(wt: 23-31 kgs)



      These dogs are intelligent, frisky and full of energy. It is not so easy to train them as they are self-willed breed. In addition, boxers are not typically aggressive by nature.



8. Presa Canario(wt: 36-52 kgs)



      It is well known that an attack of this guard dog can bring to the death any prey. One of the main features of this dog is fearlessness, huge power and man-stopping ability.



7. Doberman Pinschers(wt: 30-40 kgs)



      Pinschers are famed by such features as alertness, intelligence and loyalty. Therefore they are considered to be one of the best guard dog breeds. The dog usually attacks only in case its family is in danger or when being provoked.



6. Chow Chow(wt: 23-32 kgs)



      The Chow Chow seems to be distant and independent, however they require staunch attention. If badly bred they can become aggressive dogs.



5. Alaskan Malamutes(wt: 34-45 kgs)



      This breed requires a lot of exercises to be happy as being bored they become disobedient. On the whole their characteristic features are energy and activity.




4. Huskies(wt: 20-30 kgs)



      Despite of their energy and intelligence this breed is not regarded a good guard dog. It is caused by its kind temperament and personality characteristics. However it should be marked that between 1979 and 1997 fifteen fatal cases were caused by huskies.



3. German Shepherds(wt: 32-45 kgs)



      This breed of dogs is known as a smart and vigilant one. As German Shepherds proved to be confident and fearless local authorities such as the police K-9 unit use German Shepherds as a police dog.



2. Rottweiler(wt: 45-59 kgs)



      Due to their intense territorial instinct these dogs are very aggressive. Rottweilers are commonly used as guard dogs.



1. Pit Bulls(wt: 25-29 kgs)



      Pit bull is one of the most brave and dauntless dogs that usually takes on any opponent. Therefore they take part in dog fighting. It is common knowledge that this dog breed can even mangle the human to death as pit bull locks its jaws onto the booty until it is dead.

Thursday, 26 January 2012

TOP 10 HAUNTED US COLLEGE CAMPUSES

10. Penn State University,State college,PA
      The inspiration for this whole list was the story of Betsy Aardsma who was a student at the university in 1969. She was doing research for her English class when she was stabbed to death in one of the aisles of books in The Pattee Library. Her murder goes unsolved even today. Her ghost is said to wander the library late at night. One student who was looking at books in the very aisle that Betsy was killed in, awoke that night to the sensation of being strangled – so much so that she could not call out for help to her roommate sleeping in the same room. If this isn’t enough, the spirit of an ax murderer is said to haunt Brumbaugh Hall on Halloween nights.


9. Bradford College,Haverhill,MA
      This now abandoned college is host to a number of ghosts from the days when the college was still occupied by students. One of the more famous ghosts is that of a young girl who had a relationship with a priest at the school. When she became pregnant she either committed suicide or was murdered by the priest. Both her spirit and the spirit of the priest haunt the old Academy Building. Ghost hunters have also recorded numerous voices, screams and unexplained images on the abandoned campus.




8. University of Notre Dame
      In a school with as much history as Notre Dame, it is no surprise that it has its share of haunts. George Gipp, a legendary Notre Dame Football star who gave the famous “Win one for the Gipper” speech, is believed to haunt the university. A friendly ghost, he is often observed hovering over students shoulders, sometimes giving them a friendly pat, only to vanish when they turn around. While it would appear he is watching over students, the Patawatami Indians that also haunt the school are not so friendly. It is believed that Columbus Hall is built on their burial grounds, and the ghostly warriors are often seen riding horses up and down the steps of the hall as if protecting something within.




7. University of Georgia,Athens
      Another old school holding many mysteries and mysterious occurrences; from old confederate soldiers to murder and suicide, this campus is full of haunts. The Phi Mu sorority house is reportedly haunted by a girl named Anna Hamilton who witnessed her boyfriend murdered before her eyes and his body buried under the building’s front steps. Students have been able to talk with her using a Ouija board, and her crying is often heard in the house’s empty rooms. Another haunted sorority house is the Alpha Gamma Delta house. Being one of the universities oldest sororities, it is no surprise that is houses one of the oldest haunts, going all the way back to the founding family. Their daughter, Susie was stood up on her wedding day. Heartbroken, she hung herself in the attic. To this day occupants and visitors alike report seeing a women glaring at them from the attic windows.




6. Montclair State University,NJ
      More specifically the Clove Road Apartments at Montclair State. Like Notre Dame, the apartments are also built on an Indian burial ground…never a good idea. Doors and windows slam and lock unexpectedly. Lights flicker on and off. The building always feels cold, even with the thermostat on max. Roommates report feeling random feelings of dread, and many fights have occurred for seemingly no reason at all. A man dressed in 19th century clothes hovers over the beds of sleeping tenants, only to vanish with their screams. Worst of all are the figures seen darting between the trees in the woods at night, believed to be the ghost of the Indians no longer at rest. No one will go near the woods after sundown for fear of the unknown.




5. St. Joseph's College
      This college was used as a field hospital during the civil war. Unlike hospitals of today, civil war hospitals were often the equivalent of a modern day butcher shop. With little to no treatment options for the wounds suffered by battlefield weapons, the primary treatment was amputations. Stories are told of nurses carrying buckets of severed arms and legs away from these hospitals surgery wards. The screams of these men and, if you’re unlucky enough, the smells of the hospital are present throughout the campus. A few students have reported walking into full ghostly hospitals late at night. Amidst all this horror, a friendly ghost walks among them. Mother Seton, founder of the American Sisters of Charity, is often seen walking around campus smiling at students and rushing to attend to the eternally injured phantoms of soldiers.




4. Drew University,Madison,NJ
      Surprising that a theological university and seminary would be full of haunts but Drew University has its fair share. A misty apparition haunts Asbury hall, believed to be of a student who hung himself from the rafters. The campus is also known for the haunting of Roxanna Mead Drew, wife of the founder. One day, a fire broke out in Mead Hall (named after Roxanna) and members of the Madison Fire Department were called in to douse the flames. Two firefighters who were fighting the blaze saw a woman apparently trapped inside the burning hall and went in after her. Witnesses say that she was dressed in 19th Century attire and that the flames burned right through her. She glanced at them then disappeared.




3. Cal State University,Channel Islands,Camarillo
      It is never a good idea to build a university on the grounds of an old insane asylum as Cal State decided to do. Ever since the university first opened its doors in 2002, students have reported seeing the universities old residents wandering the grounds, halls, and streets of Cal State. Inmates are seen entering rooms which are empty upon investigation. Another inmate dances in a parking lot at night, only to fade as he approaches the streetlights. Scarier still are the violent ghosts who have thrown objects, knocked students over, and vandalized locked classrooms.




2. University of Illinois,Urbana
      After a night of drinking, a sister at the Alpha Phi Omega Sorority Hall returned to her room late one night. While ascending the stairs to get to her floor she noticed that she was being watched by a figure at the top of the stairs. Upon further inspection she realized that the figure, that of a man, was wearing a grey uniform and had no face. She quickly ran and told her friends; however the building was searched and nothing was found. Ever since then the man has been seen in numerous locations on campus. Some years ago, in Crampton Hall, a student was found hung in his closet. It was quickly determined that the student had been the victim of foul play, however no killer was ever found. Fast forward to 2007. When a student didn’t show up for a party, his friends went looking for him. They found him in his closet, hanging bound and naked upside-down, alive but terrified. That same night, several students were awakened by a man standing over them, who would turn and disappear into their closets. The man has never been identified.




1. Ohio University,Athens
      This should not be a surprise. It is well known and documented that Ohio University is perhaps one of the most haunted places in the world. From ghost teachers that talk to students, sounds and voices heard in sealed rooms, to an entire ghost basketball team, this campus is truly full of haunts. Nearly every single building on campus has at least one ghost associated with it. In a place literally full of ghosts, one manages to stand out among the rest. Wilson Hall is said to be one of the most haunted buildings in the United States, and was featured in the TV series “Scariest Places on Earth”. A female student practicing satanic rituals supposedly died violently in room 428. While this story has no real backing, what is true is that school officials have closed and sealed the room because no student could live in it peacefully. Voices are heard throughout the halls, doors lock and unlock, open and close on their own, and ghostly figures wander the building. The building is also dead center of a pentagram formed by five cemeteries which surround the campus. Rumor has it that this building itself was built on top of an old mental hospital cemetery, however this was proven to be untrue.