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Nov 13, 2012

Green Diwali




Dear Frndz,

The excitement and celebratory spirit that Diwali brings is unmatchable. Celebrating Diwali with friends and family has its own charm.

We know that diyas lit on the moonless Diwali night signifies the end of darkness of ignorance and the beginning of light that enlightens all? Well, this Diwali enlighten yourself towards the hazards that boisterous celebrations of Diwali poses to our environment.

Celebrate this Diwali with poor and under-privilege children. Share your Diwali crackers, sweets and happiness with poor children. 

I hope that this post will encourage you to celebrate a green Diwali, where there will be an explosion of joy without crackers.



1.    Illuminate the house with earthen lamps instead of electric bulbs. This will not just make the house stand apart, but save on electricity consumption as well.

2.    If bursting crackers is part of the celebrations, make it a collective neighborhood affair. Enjoy them for a limited period of time so that they have a minimal effect. This will ensure reduced cost of celebration; paper pollution in a limited space and as compared to individual celebration, community celebration will cause less air and noise pollution.




3.    Always buy low intensity crackers – 'bombs' that do not sound like nukes, and crackers that do not emit too many harmful chemicals with the smoke.


4.    Buy crackers that emit brilliant light but not ear-splitting noise. You can have your fun and protect the environment as well.

These were some of the environment friendly tips for celebrating Eco Diwali. In case you have some more ideas and tips of celebrating Green Diwali then please use our comment section to share it with us. 




Lets Celebrate Diwali with family and relatives to enjoy more joy and happiness. Play it safe. I wish all my readers and their family “HAPPY DIWALI”

Ur's

Nov 2, 2012

James Bond 007

                             



JAMES BOND COMPLETED 50 YEARS:

James Bond, code name 007, is a fictional character created in 1953 by writer Ian Fleming, who featured him in twelve novels and two short story collections. There have been six other authors who wrote authorised Bond novels or novelizations after Fleming's death in 1964: Kingsley Amis, Christopher Wood, John Gardner, Raymond Benson, Sebastian Faulks and Jeffery Deaver; a new novel, written by William Boyd, is planned for release in 2013.Additionally, Charlie Higson wrote a series on a young James Bond and Kate Westbrook wrote three novels based on the diaries of a recurring series character, Moneypenny.

The fictional British Secret Service agent has also been adapted for television, radio, comic strip and video game formats as well as being used in the longest continually running and the second-highest grossing film franchise to date, which started in 1962 with Dr. No, starring Sean Connery as Bond. As of 2012, there have been twenty three films in the Eon Productions series. The most recent Bond film, Skyfall, stars Daniel Craig in his third portrayal of Bond: he is the sixth actor to play Bond in the Eon series. There have also been two independent productions of Bond films, Casino Royale, a 1967 spoof, and Never Say Never Again, a 1983 remake of an earlier Eon-produced film, Thunderball.

The films are renowned for a number of features, including the musical accompaniment, with the theme songs to the films having picked up Academy Award nominations on several occasions. Other important elements which run through most of the films include Bond's cars, his guns and the gadgets he is supplied with by Q Branch.

FLEMING'S COMIC IMAGE:



JAMES BOND CHARACTER HEROES:

BARRY NELSON(1954):



SEAN CONNERY(1962-1971 & 1983):




DAVID NIVEN(1967):


GEORGE LAZENBY(1969):



CHRISTOPHER CAZENOVE(1973):





ROGER MOORE(1973-1985):




TIMOTHY DALTON(1986-1993):




PIERCE BROSNAN(1995-2005):





DANIEL CRAIG(2006-AT PRESENT):




JAMES BOND GUNS,VEHICLES AND GADGETS:


GUNS:

JAMES BOND'S FAMOUS GUN "WALTHER PPK":


For the first five novels, Fleming armed Bond with a Beretta 418 until he received a letter from a thirty-one-year-old Bond enthusiast and gun expert, Geoffrey Boothroyd, criticising Fleming's choice of firearm for Bond,calling it "a lady's gun – and not a very nice lady at that!" Boothroyd suggested that Bond should swap his Beretta for a Walther PPK 7.65mm and this exchange of arms made it to Dr. No. Boothroyd also gave Fleming advice on the Berns-Martin triple draw shoulder holster and a number of the weapons used by SMERSH and other villains. In thanks, Fleming gave the MI6 Armourer in his novels the name Major Boothroyd and, in Dr. No, M introduces him to Bond as "the greatest small-arms expert in the world". Bond also used a variety of rifles, including the Savage Model 99 in "For Your Eyes Only" and a Winchester .308 target rifle in "The Living Daylights". Other handguns used by Bond in the Fleming books included the Colt Detective Special and a long-barrelled Colt .45 Army Special.

The first Bond film, Dr. No, saw M ordering Bond to leave his Beretta behind and take up the Walther PPK, which the film Bond used in eighteen films. Since Tomorrow Never Dies, Bond's main weapon has been the Walther P99 semi-automatic pistol.

VEHICLES:

JAMES BOND'S FAMOUS CAR "ASTON MARTIN DB5":




In the early Bond stories Fleming gave Bond a battleship-grey Bentley 4½ Litre with an Amherst Villiers supercharger. After Bond's car was written off by Hugo Drax in Moonraker, Fleming gave Bond a Mark II Continental Bentley, which he used in the remaining books of the series. During Goldfinger, Bond was issued with an Aston Martin DB Mark III with a homing device, which he used to track Goldfinger across France. Bond returned to his Bentley for the subsequent novels.

The Bond of the films has driven a number of cars, including the Aston Martin V8 Vantage, during the 1980s), the V12 Vanquish and DBS during the 2000s, as well as the Lotus Esprit; the BMW Z3, BMW 750iL and the BMW Z8. He has, however, also needed to drive a number of other vehicles, ranging from a Citroën 2CV to a Routemaster Bus, amongst others.

Bond's most famous car is the silver grey Aston Martin DB5, first seen in Goldfinger; it later featured in Thunderball, GoldenEye, Tomorrow Never Dies and Casino Royale. The films have used a number of different Aston Martins for filming and publicity, one of which was sold in January 2006 at an auction in the US for $2,090,000 to an unnamed European collector.


GADGETS:


JAMES BOND'S FAMOUS JET "LITTLE NELIE AUTOGYRO":



Fleming's novels and early screen adaptations presented minimal equipment such as the booby-trapped attaché case in From Russia with Love, although this situation changed dramatically with the films. However, the effects of the two Eon-produced Bond films Dr. No and From Russia with Love had an effect on the novel The Man with the Golden Gun, through the increased number of devices used in Fleming's final story.

For the film adaptations of Bond, the pre-mission briefing by Q Branch became one of the motifs that ran through the series. Dr. No provided no spy-related gadgets, but a Geiger counter was used; industrial designer Andy Davey observed that the first ever onscreen spy-gadget was the attaché case shown in From Russia with Love, which he described as "a classic 007 product". The gadgets assumed a higher profile in the 1964 film Goldfinger. The film's success encouraged further espionage equipment from Q Branch to be supplied to Bond, although the increased use oftechnology led to an accusation that Bond was over-reliant on equipment, particularly in the later films.

If it hadn't been for Q Branch, you'd have been dead long ago!
Q, to Bond,
Licence to Kill

Davey noted that "Bond's gizmos follow the zeitgeist more closely than any other ... nuance in the films" as they moved from the potential representations of the future in the early films, through to the brand-name obsessions of the later films. It is also noticeable that, although Bond uses a number of pieces of equipment from Q Branch, including the Little Nellie autogyro, a jet pack and the exploding attaché case, the villains are also well-equipped with custom made devices, including Scaramanga's golden gun, Rosa Klebb's poison-tipped shoes, Oddjob's steel-rimmed bowler hat and Blofeld's communication and bacteriological warfare agents vanity case.

Ur's

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