How To Use Mobile Camera As A Webcam !



Smartcam is a small utility which can help you in using your mobile camera as a webcam and it is really handy to use so simply downloading it and installing it will help you in using it. You do not need to have any kind of technical knowledge so just check out the below steps and enjoy this amazing small software.

Install Smartcam Package on Mobile and on your PC :

1. First you need to have Smartcam package in your PC and on your Mobile Phone installed, you can download this full Smartcam Package which contains PC software and all mobile versions app.
2. Now you have downloaded the above package you need to extract it and than install it on your PC and your Mobile Phone.
3. Now simply fire it up on your PC and on your Mobile Phone, now connect your phone to your PC with USB or Bluetooth which ever is available.
Smartcam Windows
Now enjoy using your mobile as your pc webcam, it simply works fine as reported by many readers, but still you find any problems than please make sure to comment below so that it can be solved.

How to use IMEI number to find out more information about your mobile phone ?

What is an IMEI number?

Well IMEI is an abbreviation or shortform for International
Mobile Equipment Identity, is a unique 15 digit IMEI code number given to every single mobile phone.



How to get IMEI number of a mobile phone ?


IMEI number is usually found printed on compliance plate inside the battery compartment of the phone. It can also be found by typing *#06# into the keypad of the phone.

How to use IMEI number to find out more information about your mobile phone ?

To find out more information about your mobile phone using its IMEI number just visit International Numbering Plans website, enter your mobile phone's IMEI number in the search box provided on the website and it will show you a whole lot of information about your mobile phone and you will find whatever 
you are looking for.



















Source:Mbt.com

Add Flying Twitter Bird To Blogger!

We sometimes visit blogs and see animated flying cute twitter bird. That looks very amazing indeed. One of my visitors requested me how to add an animated flying twitter bird in blogger. Well, you can easily add flying twitter bird in both blogger and WordPress. But the procedure is different in two section.


You already have seen the flying twitter bird in my website. Today i am onlytalking about blogger but how to do this in WordPress, will tell later.

  • Log in to blogger > Design > Edit HTML

  • Now press CTRL+F and find the following code
</body>
Now paste following code just after </body>


<script src='https://sites.google.com/site/mmktricks/flyingtwitter.js' type='text/javascript'>
</script>
<script type='text/javascript'>
var twitterAccount = &quot;your twitter username&quot;;
var tweetThisText = &quot; <data:blog.pageTitle/> : <data:blog.url/> &quot;;
tripleflapInit();
</script>


You have to replace your twitter username with the highlighted color text. Save the template and see a nice animated flying twitter bird



How To Lose Weight Naturally Tips For Slim Body



1. Side Stretches

To do the side stretches, you need to stand straight. Keep your feet apart, at the shoulder’s width. Raise one arm over your head and lean to that side as far as possible. Repeat this with the other arm. You should feel the strain on the side of your belly, since that is where the fat burns off, with the help of this exercise.
Tip  - Use Cardamon Daily 

2. Straight Leg Lift

Lie down straight on your back, on a yoga mat. Place a thin book or other block between your inner thighs. Now, slowly, bring your legs straight up, with the feet pointing toward the ceiling, and without the knees bending. Keeping the back pressed to the ground, maintain this position for a few seconds, before bringing the legs down without bending. Repeat.

3. Locust Pose

Lie down flat on your yoga mat, with your face facing down. Stretch out your legs and arms as far wide as possible. Keeping both arms and legs absolutely straight, lift the head, arms, chest and legs all at the same time. Maintain this position for a few seconds before slowly lowering all parts simultaneously. Repeat.

4. Bridge Pose

This pose is very helpful in burning the belly fat as well as building the muscles of the abdomen. Lie flat on your back on your yoga mat. Bend the knees and keep your feet apart from each other. Your arms should be straight by the side of your body. Now lift your torso off the ground, leaving your head, arms and feet planted right where they are. Maintain the position for a few seconds, before gradually lowering the body back on the mat. Repeat.

Bridge PoseAuthentic Yoga is a collaboration between Deepak Chopra and Tara Stiles. In this video learn the practice of Bridge Pose.
5. Modified Wheel

Another tremendous yoga posture, this one is great for reducing belly fat too. Lie flat on your back on your yoga mat. Bend the knees and keep the feet a little apart from each other. Keep your feet and palms flat on the ground. Now lift your hips and torso up towards the ceiling. Maintain the position for a few seconds. Gently lower the body back to the ground. Repeat.
Regular practice of some or all of the above positions s bound to flex our abs muscles and burn the extra flab around the belly.

Indian Girl Has Higher IQ Than Einstein


London, Mar 5 (ANI): A 12-year-old Indian girl has stunned everyone after she was revealed to have an IQ higher than Albert Einstein and Stephen Hawking.
Neha Ramu achieved a score of 162 on a Mensa IQ test - the highest score possible, the Telegraph reported.
Despite her young age, the score puts her in the top one percent of brightest people in the UK, which means she is more intelligent than Hawking, Bill Gates and even Einstein, who are all thought to have an IQ of 160. 
Ramu's doctor parents, who lived in India before moving to Britain when their daughter was seven, had no idea their daughter was so gifted.
Although she had always performed well at school, it was only when she took an entrance exam for Tiffin Girls', a high-achieving grammar school, and achieved a perfect score of 280/280 that they realised her capabilities.
Two years later, she took the test for Mensa, a society for people with high IQs, and achieved the maximum possible score for someone aged under 18.
"I am so proud of her. Although she's being doing well at these kind of tests for sometime now this is just marvellous. I can't express the feeling," Neha's mother Jayashree said.
The score would be sufficient to get her into any Ivy League university. (ANI)



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8 of the World's Deadliest Snakes


Few animals strike as much fear into people as venomous snakes. Although the chances of running into a venomous snake, much less being bitten and dying from the toxin injected into one's body, are miniscule compared to dying from cancer, heart disease, or an automobile accident, this seemingly unreasonable fear remains very real for many people. The snakes described here live primarily in tropical regions, but some might be living in research centers and zoos near you.
_________________________________________________________________________________

The barba amarilla (“yellow chin”) of Latin America


Bothrops asper [Credit: © Damtraveller/Fotolia]The fer-de-lance (which means “lance head” in French) is not one species but any of several pit vipers from Bothrops, a genus from Central and South America, andTrimeresurus, a genus from Asia. Some officials maintain that young fer-de-lances may be more deadly than the adults because they have not learned to control the doses of venom they deliver.

 One of the most dangerous snakes in Africa


boomslang [Credit: Dade Thornton—The National Audubon Society Collection/Photo Researchers]The boomslang (Dispholidus typus) hunts by extending the forward part of its body motionless from a tree, its form mimicking a branch. A rear-fanged snake, it delivers its venom by chewing on its victim until the victim succumbs to the toxins.



The quinessential Australian cobra



eastern tiger snake [Credit: JAW]The eastern tiger snake (Notechis scutatus) is the most widely distributed type of tiger snake, which inhabits the southern fringe of Australia and the region’s nearby islands. As it prepares to strike, it flattens its head and neck in a manner similar to Asian and African cobras.

The killer of the most people



saw-scaled viper [Credit: Anton Thau/Bavaria-Verlag]The saw-scaled viper (Echis carinatus) may be the deadliest of all snakes, since scientists believe it to be responsible for more human deaths than all other snake species combined. Its venom, however, is lethal in less than 10 percent of untreated victims, but the snake's aggressiveness means it bites early and often.

 A dangerous snake with a triangular-shaped cross section


banded krait [Credit: Cy LaTour at the Detroit Zoo]The banded krait (Bungarus fasciatus) is a highly venomous relative of the cobra. Its venom is essentially a neurotoxin that induces paralysis.

The longest venomous snake in the world

#2: The largest relative of the cobra in Australia
king cobra [Credit: © Heiko Kiera/Fotolia]The king cobra (Ophiophagus hannah) is the longest venomous snake in the world. Its bite delivers a tremendous amount of paralysis-inducing neurotoxins. The snake's venom is so strong and so voluminous that it can kill an elephant in just a few hours. Death also results in at least 50 to 60 percent of untreated human cases.

 The largest relative of the cobra in Australia


The coastal taipan (Oxyuranus scutellatus) produces venom that is nearly identical to that of its inland cousin. Its bite is lethal in more than 80 percent of untreated cases.

The snake with the world's deadliest venom


fierce snake [Credit: © BMCL/Shutterstock.com]The bite of an inland taipan—Oxyuranus microlepidotus, also called, appropriately, the fierce snake—delivers a veritable witch's brew of toxins. The venom consists of taipoxin, a complex mix of neurotoxins, procoagulants, and myotoxins that paralyze muscles, inhibit breathing, cause hemorraging in blood vessels and tissues, and damage muscles.

C++

C++, high-level computer programming language. Developed by Bjarne Stroustrup of Bell Laboratories in the early 1980s, it is based on the traditional C language but with added object-oriented programming and other capabilities. C++, along with Java, has become popular for developing commercial software packages that incorporate multiple interrelated applications. C++ is considered one of the fastest languages and is very close to low-level languages, thus allowing complete control over memory allocation and management. This very feature and its many other capabilities also make it one of the most difficult languages to learn and handle on a large scale.

Democracy



democracy, literally, rule by the people. The term is derived from the Greek dēmokratiā, which was coined from dēmos (“people”) and kratos (“rule”) in the middle of the 5th century bc to denote the political systems then existing in some Greek city-states, notably Athens.Table Of Contents

Fundamental questions

The etymological origins of the term democracy hint at a number of urgent problems that go far beyond semantic issues. If a government of or by the people—a “popular” government—is to be established, at least five fundamental questions must be confronted at the outset, and two more are almost certain to be posed if the democracy continues to exist for long.
(1) What is the appropriate unit or association within which a democratic government should be established? A town or city? A country? A business corporation? A university? An international organization? All of these?
(2) Given an appropriate association—a city, for example—who among its members should enjoy full citizenship? Which persons, in other words, should constitute the dēmos? Is every member of the association entitled to participate in governing it? Assuming that children should not be allowed to participate (as most adults would agree), should the dēmos include all adults? If it includes only a subset of the adult population, how small can the subset be before the association ceases to be a democracy and becomes something else, such as an aristocracy (government by the best, aristos) or an oligarchy (government by the few, oligos)?
(3) Assuming a proper association and a proper dēmos, how are citizens to govern? What political organizations or institutions will they need? Will these institutions differ between different kinds of associations—for example, a small town and a large country?
(4) When citizens are divided on an issue, as they often will be, whose views should prevail, and in what circumstances? Should a majority always prevail, or should minorities sometimes be empowered to block or overcome majority rule?
(5) If a majority is ordinarily to prevail, what is to constitute a proper majority? A majority of all citizens? A majority of voters? Should a proper majority comprise not individual citizens but certain groups or associations of citizens, such as hereditary groups or territorial associations?
(6) The preceding questions presuppose an adequate answer to a sixth and even more important question: Why should “the people” rule? Is democracy really better than aristocracy or monarchy? Perhaps, as Plato argues in the Republic, the best government would be led by a minority of the most highly qualified persons—an aristocracy of “philosopher-kings.” What reasons could be given to show that Plato’s view is wrong?
(7) No association could maintain a democratic government for very long if a majority of thedēmos—or a majority of the government—believed that some other form of government were better. Thus, a minimum condition for the continued existence of a democracy is that a substantial proportion of both the dēmos and the leadership believes that popular government is better than any feasible alternative. What conditions, in addition to this one, favour the continued existence of democracy? What conditions are harmful to it? Why have some democracies managed to endure, even through periods of severe crisis, while so many others have collapsed?Table Of Contents

Democratic institutions

Since the time of the ancient Greeks, both the theory and the practice of democracy have undergone profound changes, many of which have concerned the prevailing answers to questions (1) through (3) above. Thus, for thousands of years the kind of association in which democracy was practiced, the tribe or the city-state, was small enough to be suitable for some form of democracy by assembly, or “direct democracy.” Much later, beginning in the 18th century, as the typical association became the nation-state or country, direct democracy gave way to representative democracy—a transformation so sweeping that, from the perspective of a citizen of ancient Athens, the governments of gigantic associations such as France or the United States might not have appeared democratic at all. This change in turn entailed a new answer to question (3): Representative democracy would require a set of political institutions radically different from those of all earlier democracies.
Another important change has concerned the prevailing answers to question (2). Until fairly recently, most democratic associations limited the right to participate in government to a minority of the adult population—indeed, sometimes to a very small minority. Beginning in the 20th century, this right was extended to nearly all adults. Accordingly, a contemporary democrat could reasonably argue that Athens, because it excluded so many adults from the dēmos, was not really a democracy—even though the term democracy was invented and first applied in Athens.
Despite these and other important changes, it is possible to identify a considerable number of early political systems that involved some form of “rule by the people,” even if they were not fully democratic by contemporary standards.

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