Saturday, July 31, 2010

Pani Chori Waqt Column Zafar Iqbal 1 August 2010

Pani Chori Waqt Column Zafar Iqbal 1 August 2010

Lalich Aik Marz Waqt Column Afzal Tauseef 1 August 2010

Lalich Aik Marz Waqt Column Afzal Tauseef 1 August 2010

Jawani Brhapa Waqt Column Sadiq Azhar 1 August 2010

Jawani Brhapa Waqt Column Sadiq Azhar 1 August 2010

Ahsas Kijye Islam Column Nadeem Tabani 1 August 2010

Ahsas Kijye Islam Column Nadeem Tabani 1 August 2010

David Cameron Ki Harza Sarai Islam Column Shamim Akhtar 1 August 2010

David Cameron Ki Harza Sarai Islam Column Shamim Akhtar 1 August 2010

Kuradte Jawab Islam Column Younis Alam 1 August 2010

Kuradte Jawab Islam Column Younis Alam 1 August 2010

London Ki Thag Jang Column Rauf Klasra 1 August 2010

London Ki Thag Jang Column Rauf Klasra 1 August 2010

Awami Numandagi Jang Column Qamar Qaira 1 August 2010

Awami Numandagi Jang Column Qamar Qaira 1 August 2010

Friday, July 30, 2010

GDI Home Business to Earn Online Income

GDI Home Business to Earn Online Income

Get Blogging Jobs Online To Make Money

Get Blogging Jobs Online To Make Money

Earning Money With The Adsense For Search

Earning Money With The Adsense For Search

Joel Comm The Best Google Adsense Expert

Joel Comm The Best Google Adsense Expert

Amazing and Interesting

Awaz ApniMobiles have more germs than toilets LONDON: Mobile phones are writhing bug factories that can harbour 18 times more bacteria than a flush handle in a men's toilet, a new study shows.
With iPhone 4 fever about to hit Melbourne, a researcher who swabbed 30 mobiles found at least seven had unacceptably high levels of bacteria.
The results point to potentially poor hygiene among millions of mobile phone users that could result in stomach upsets, or worse.
"The levels of potentially harmful bacteria on one mobile were off the scale," said UK hygiene expert Jim Francis.
"That phone needs sterilising."
The microscopic nasties ranged from enterobacteria, a group of bacteria that includes bugs such as salmonella, to food poisoning bugs e.coli and staphylococcus aureus.
Even if a phone owner is scrupulously clean, beating the bacteria may not be so simple.
Handing your phone to others so they can view holiday snaps or marvel at a cool new iPhone app is an invitation for bugs to get on board.
Researcher Ceri Stanaway said most phones in the study didn't have any bacteria that would make users sick straight away, but they were grubbier than they need be.
"The bugs can end up on your hands, which is a breeding ground and be passed back to your phone," she said.
"They can be transferred back and forth and eventually you could catch something nasty."
Researchers said the study showed how easy it was to come into contact with bacteria.
"People see toilet flushes as being something dirty to touch but they have less bacteria than phones," Ms Stanaway said.

Air Blue Plane Crash Exclusive Pictures

Air blue Plane Crash in Pictures www.cnewsworld.com

Islamabad Air Plane Crash in photo
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