Sunday, May 26, 2019

being engineer facts

Engineers beware! You thought you knew everything about yourself, your colleagues and your job? 
You surely have not heard the following 7 facts – which will make your engineer’s heart skip a beat ;-)
Engineering wonder Ferris Wheel
1. The word “engineer” is derived from the Latin word “ingenium”, which means something like “native talent” or “cleverness”. Until the 18th century, the job exclusively referred to war engines, i.e. engineers built weapons and fortresses.
2. The first engineer known by name was the Egyptian pyramid builder Imhotep. Around 2700 B.C. he built the first pyramids in Egypt and thus gained an almost godlike status.
first engineer built pyramids
3. The namesake of Mount Everest was an engineer: From 1832 to 1842, the British Surveyor George Everest was the Superintendent and later, the Surveyor General of the “Great Trigonometric Survey of India“. He contributed substantially to the measurement of the Indian meridian arc starting at the southernmost tip of India and reaching up to the foothills of the Himalayas.
4. The Ferris wheel is regarded as one of the largest engineering wonders of the world. The first modern big wheel was built by Pittburgh’s George Washington Gale Ferris, an engineer for railway technology and bridge building, for the 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition in Chicago. This giant wheel was also named after him: The Ferris Wheel. By the way, with a height of 135 m, the London Eye is the tallest Ferris wheel in Europe.
5. Engineers also play an important role in the amusement park industry. Engineers are involved in planning, construction, lighting and even crowd control.
6. The snowboard was invented by an engineer. Serman Poppen created a winter toy for his daughter, by bolting two snow skis together and attaching a rope to the front. From this “Snurfer” and after various refinements and technical modifications, the modern snowboard evolved into what we know today – a wonder of geometry, chemistry and biomechanics.
Snowboard invention of an engineer
7. What do fashionable running shoes have to do with engineers? Well, engineers are significantly involved in their production process. They make sure that the impact from the ground contact, i.e. the shock of each walking or running step, is dispersed through the entire foot. This will not only be kind to our feet, but will also protect our joints and spine.

Saturday, May 25, 2019

Pokemon Facts

  1. Bulbasaur is the only unevolved dual type starter Pokémon.
  2. Ivysaur is the only Generation I Pokémon whose name begins with the letter I.
  3. Venusaur is a combination of the words Venus which refers to the Venus Flytrap
    plant, and the Greek word saur, meaning lizard.
  4. Charmander is the tallest Fire-type starter Pokémon.
  5. Charmeleon is capable of learning Leer in Generation I.
  6. Charizard was voted as the favourite Pokémon by Official Nintendo Magazine readers in February 2012.
  7. Squirtle is the first Water-type Pokémon in National Pokédex.
  8. Wartortle gets its name from a combination of war/warrior, tortoise, and turtle.
  9. Blastoise has the highest base Special Defense of all fully evolved starter Pokémon.
  10. Caterpie was the first Pokémon to be seen evolving in the animé

Tuesday, March 26, 2019

The list of great books You must have to read it

1.Think and grow rich 
Think & Grow Rich by Napoleon Hill. "When you begin to think and grow rich, you will observe that riches begin with a state of mind, with definiteness of purpose, with little or no hard work. ... Think & Grow Rich is probably THE #1 most famous success book of all time



2. 7 habits of highly effective people 
 That's where the seven habits of highly effective people come in: Habits 1, 2, and 3 are focused on self-mastery and moving from dependence to independence. Habits 4, 5, and 6 are focused on developing teamwork, collaboration, and communication skills, and moving from independence to interdependence

l achieve it.

3. The One Thing by Gary Keller

Do you know who you are? What makes you successful? Those are the questions posed by The One Thing. If you can't identify that one thing that makes you unique or valuable, this is the book you need. This book taught me how to analyze myself; when I finally broke myself down, and discovered that one thing that makes me 



4.Manage Your Day-to-Day by Jocelyn K. Glei

"Stop doing busywork. Start doing your best work" is the theme of this book. Many times I have met inspiring entrepreneurs, and creative geniuses, who are kept from amazing success because of their terrible schedule or lack of routine. I was guilty of the same thing. No amount of talent or skill was able to help me until I created a manageable schedule.
I used to always run to fix the latest "fire" in the office, and I would get nothing of value accomplished all day. When I come in with a ready schedule, not only do I generate more value, but I also get more done, and things end up resolving themselves.
5.The power of your subconcious mind 
: The Power of Your Subconscious Mind was written by a leading expert on the subject, Joseph Murphy. From my perspective, this book equates your subconscious mind with God, which is likely a different and challenging paradigm for some to accept.

Samsung Galaxy M20


Monday, March 25, 2019

New tech facts

1.The english name for red panda is FIREFOX so the browser got its name
 

2.very first the apple logo was featured sir newton sitting beneath the tree and the apple is about to hit his head  
 

3.On average work day typist fingers travell about 12.7 miles

 
4. The dentist named Alfred Southwick invented electric wheelchair 

 
5.In 1999 the paypal was considered as worst buissness idea

NANOTECH FACTS


  • 🖌A nanometre (nm) is a billionth of a metre, or a millionth of a millimetre.
  • 🖌1 nanometre is about 8 times the radius of an atom and 100 times smaller than a bacterial cell. At this scale matter reacts differently, for example, a material's melting point may change or it may become more reactive.
  • 🖌A human hair is 80,000 nm in diameter.
  • Nanoscience works on a scale 1000 times smaller than anything that can be seen with an optical microscope.
  • 🖌We are already surrounded by billions of nano-particles, such as wind borne sea salt and chemicals generated by oceanic plankton.
  • 🖌A new form of carbon with a cylindrical nanostructure - the nanotube - was discovered in 1991.
  • 🖌Nanotubes have novel properties including extraordinary strength and unique electrical properties.
  • 🖌These mechanical and electrical properties make nanotubes potentially useful in many applications from electronics to everyday items like clothes and sports gear
  • 🖌The discovery of another nanoscale carbon form, C60, called the buckyball, brought the 1996 Nobel Prize in Chemistry to Robert Curl, Sir Harold Kroto, and Richard Smalley. It started an avalanche of research into other nanoscale materials.
  • 🖌Nanotechnology is already applied commercially in products ranging from mobile phones, computer discs, tennis rackets and golf clubs to sunscreens and cosmetics.
  • 🖌L'Oreal have developed nanosize vesicles called nanosomes. They are used to transport active ingredients such as pure Vitamin E through the skin
  • 🖌Nanoscience is not just one science. It is a platform that includes biology, chemistry, physics, materials science and engineering.
  • 🖌Nanotechnology was first introduced in 1959 by Nobel Prize-winning physicist Richard Feynman. He proposed using normal-sized robots to construct smaller replicas of themselves and then using the new set to manufacture an even smaller set, and so on, until the molecular scale is reached.
  • 🖌It is widely accepted that nanotechnology could revolutionize our lives over the next 20 years. Particular fields include disease identification and cure, drug discovery and delivery, environmentally friendly renewable energy sources, and ultra-high speed mobile telecommunications.
  • 🖌Nanotechnology is multidisciplinary. Materials scientists, mechanical and electronic engineers and medical researchers are teaming up with biologists, physicists and chemists. Research at the nanoscale is unified by the need to pool knowledge on tools and techniques and to share expertise.
  • 🖌Nanotechnology is already having an impact on novel foods, medical devices, chemical coatings, personal health testing kits, sensors for security systems, water purification units for manned space craft, displays for hand-held computer games, and high-resolution cinema screens.
  • 🖌Self-assembly at the scale of molecules is commonly employed by nature within every living cell but it is very rarely used in engineering procedures.
  • 🖌Nanotechnology enables new developments in electronics, medicine, healthcare and in many consumer products.
  • 🖌Nanotechnology will change our lives in many ways. It is important that it is developed responsibly and that it also addresses the concerns of citizens.
  • 🖌At the Nano level the differences between scientific disciplines fade. Nanotechnology needs new approaches that cross the tradition boundaries between physics, chemistry, biology and engineering.

    The word nano is from the Greek word 'Nanos' meaning Dwarf. It is a prefix used to describe "one billionth" of something

Intresting Animal Facts

1. Sea otters hold hands when they sleep to keep from drifting apart.

Image credits: commons.wikimedia.org

2. Squirrels plant thousands of new trees each year by merely forgetting where they put their acorns.

Image credits: Irene Mei

3. When playing with female puppies, male puppies will often let them win, even if they have a physical advantage.

Image credits: Brian Whipple

4. Turtles can breathe through their butts.

Image credits: TaraDSturm

5. Cows have best friends.

Image credits: mare

6. Gentoo penguins propose to their lifemates with a pebble.

Image credits: telegraph.co.uk

7. A prison in Washington pairs up “death row” shelter cats with select inmates as part of a rehabilitation program. It seems to be a pretty incredible thing for both the inmates and the cats.

Princess Natalie relaxes with Joseph Contreras, one of her caretakers. (Image credits: catster.com)

8. Macaques in Japan use coins to buy vending machine snacks.

Image credits: o2worldnews.com

9. Norway knighted a penguin.

Image credits: thatpanic.com

10. In China, killing a Panda is punishable by death.

Image credits: Cute Baby Animals

11. Rats laugh when tickled.


12. Spiders can’t fly.

13. Sweden has a rabbit show-jumping competition called Kaninhoppning.

Image credits: thowra

14. Pigs’ orgasms last for 30 minutes.

Image credits: Source Media

15. Dolphins have names for each other.

Image credits: Vitaliy Sokol

16. Puffins mate for life. They make their homes on cliff sides and set aside room for their toilet.

Image credits: fourteenfoottiger

17. A study measuring the effects of music found that cows produce more milk when listening to soothing music. They produce the most when listening to R.E.M’s “Everybody Hurts.”

Image credits: cbc.ca

18. Oysters can change gender depending on which is best for mating.

Image credits: wallpaper4me.com

19. Japanese Macaques make snowballs for fun.

Image credits: Lee Fisher

20. The closest relatives to the elephant shrew are actually elephants, not shrews.

Image credits: Klaus Wiese
Image credits: Josef Gelernter

21. A cat version of the corgi exits: the munchkin cat.

Image credits: Jimmy Leo

22. There is a program that makes prison inmates responsible for training and raising seeing-eye dogs. Many reported that they felt like they were making amends for their past actions by working with the puppies.

Image credits: absencesix

23. Seahorses mate for life, and when they travel, they hold each others’ tails.

Image credits: Georgina Gomez

24. Before chicks hatch, they can communicate with each other and their mother through a system of sounds.

Image credits: caryn74

25. Dogs’ nose prints are as unique as human fingerprints and can be used to identify them.

being engineer facts

Engineers beware! You thought you knew everything about yourself, your colleagues and your job?  You surely have not heard the following 7...