Monday, June 30, 2008

If you want a free program!!

Just visit this sites... www.projectw.org , www.final4ever.com, and www.forumw.org tnx!

Sunday, June 29, 2008

VIRUS WARNING!

READ IMMEDIATELY PLEASE!!! Get this sent around to your contacts ASAP...we don't need this spreading around. Do not open any message with an attached file called 'Invitation' regardless of who sent it, It is a virus that opens an Olympic Torch which 'burns' the whole hard disc C of your computer. If you receive a mail called ' invitation' , though sent by a friend, do not open it and shut down your computer immediately. This is the worst virus announced by CNN, it has been classified by Microsoft as the most destructive virus ever. This virus was discovered by McAfee yesterday, and there is no repair yet for this kind of virus. This virus simply destroys yours hard disk

REMINDERS:

ENGLISH = N-O-N-E
MANAGEMENT = assignment about case studies
MATH = quiz T.T
PHYSICS = practical quiz/moving quiz/lab quiz (most probably)

thx.. ^^

Saturday, June 28, 2008

Serial Key Problems?

Just E-mail me.. ionic_acid@yahoo.com

MANNY a.k.a THE MEHICANO DESTROYER


Emmanuel Dapidran Pacquiao, (born December 17, 1978 in Kibawe, Bukidnon, Mindanao, Philippines), simply known as Manny Pacquiao or Pac-Man, is a Filipino professional boxer. He is the WBC and Ring Magazine Super Featherweight Champion, the former world champion at IBF Super Bantamweight, and WBC Flyweight divisions. Pacquiao took over as the Ring Magazine pound for pound #1 ranked boxer in the world on June 9, 2008, after Floyd Mayweather, Jr. announced his retirement from boxing.[2] Pacquiao is the first Asian boxer to win three world titles in three different weight divisions. He recently defeated David Díaz in his bout for Diaz's WBC Lightweight title on June 28 at Mandalay Bay, Las Vegas.

Friday, June 27, 2008

Hard Time..

If you are having hard time with your studies... just do this

1. Sleep Early
2. Wake Up Early
3. Listen...

This is the only thing that you need to do in order to achieve what you want! God bless

yahoo email add's (YM)

The File is in .zip format:
click this link --> YMs of our class

any changes in this file just comment in this blog or contact me using my e.add:
cyvill_domingo74@yahoo.com

Thursday, June 26, 2008

Software Collections

If you want any software programs just comment me and i will send you the Link.. God bless..
or send me an e-mail ionic_acid@yahoo.com God bless!!

Wednesday, June 25, 2008

WORLD'S shortest MAN!! OMFG!! how short is he?!


Pingping He (Chinese: 何平平; b. July 1988) is a Chinese man who has been officially named by the Guinness World Records as the world's shortest man.

The 20-year old measures 73 cm (2 ft 4 in)[1] high, and is the third child to a family in Huade county, in the city of Wulanchabu in northern China's Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region. He has two sisters, both of whom developed at normal rates and are now married. According to his father, He Yun, at birth he was as small as a palm. When it became apparent the child was growing very slowly, doctors diagnosed the cause as the bone deformity Osteogenesis Imperfecta which hinders the normal growth of bone and bodily height, although it is much more likely that He Pingping has Primordial Dwarfism.

In January 2007, He was invited to take part on a television program in Tokyo, Japan and has since then become an internet icon. Interestingly, his home of Inner Mongolia is also home to Bao Xishun, who at 2.36 metres tall was recognized as the world's tallest man until August 2007, and their televised meeting in July 2007 attracted global media attention. In May 2008 he appeared in the British Channel 4 documentary called "the world's smallest man and me" hosted by Mark Dolan. In the documentary, in which Dolan visited a further 2 'candidates,' his temperament was outlined with his refusal to be seen on camera without being paid a substantial amount. He smokes 2 packets of cigarettes every day.

Since that television program it has been verified by Guinness World Records that He is the worlds shortest man. He’s height was measured three times over the course of 10 hours before he received a certificate officially naming him as the world’s shortest living man.

Tuesday, June 24, 2008

THE WORLD'S FASTEST MAN "Faster than any man has gone before"

Asafa Powell
Jamaican sprinter Asafa Powell: the world's fastest man. (AP Photo)
Citius, altius, fortius.
This simple Latin dictum — faster, higher, stronger — not only serves as the motto for the Olympic Games, but is also the ideological tie that binds every 100-metre sprinter in history.

Over the past 93 years, 14 different athletes have been recognized as "the world's fastest man," each man faster and stronger, and having aimed higher than his predecessor.

From Don Lippincott in 1912 to Asafa Powell in 2005 and everybody in between, all of them have been guided by those three pillars of the Olympic philosophy: speed, ambition and strength.

The world record in the 100-metre dash was first recognized in 1912 by the International Association of Athletics Federations, track and field's world governing body.

It's interesting to note that the sprinter first considered the world's fastest man did not even win Olympic gold when he set the record. Don Lippincott, an 18-year-old student from the University of Pennsylvania, ran the 100 in 10.6 seconds in a qualifying heat at the 1912 Stockholm Games, but only managed a bronze in the sprint final.

Lippincott's claim to being the world's fastest man lasted nine years before fellow American Charlie Paddock established a new record of 10.4 seconds on April 23, 1921 at a university track meet in California.

Amazingly, Paddock broke four world records on the day — 100 metres, 200 metres, 300 yards and 300 metres — and equalled the world's record in the 100-yard dash.

Like Lippincott, Paddock's record remained intact for nine years, before falling at the feet of Canadian Percy Williams.

The Vancouver native stunned the world when he won gold in the 100 and 200 at the 1928 Olympics. Many sports journalists thought Williams's double-gold performance was a fluke, saying the soft track in Amsterdam aided the Canadian. But Williams proved all the doubters wrong and earned his place in the pantheon of Canadian sports idols when he ran the 100 in 10.3 seconds two years later in Toronto.

Williams, the first of only four non-Americans to be known as the world's fastest man, retained the title for six years before Jesse Owens, another sprinter with a point to prove, took the crown from him.

The African-American son of an Alabama sharecropper, Owens is best remembered for winning four gold medals at the 1936 Berlin Games, his victories soundly refuting Hitler's doctrine of the racial superiority of white Europeans. But it was just weeks before the Olympics opened that Owens broke the 100-metre world record, clocking 10.2 seconds at a meet in Chicago.

Owens's record stood for two decades before American Willie Williams came along and ran the 100 in 10.1 seconds at a meet in Berlin. Ironically, Williams accomplished the feat 20 years to the date and on the very same track that Owens won the gold medal in the 100.

West Germany's Armin Hary took over the mantle of the world's fastest man when he ran the 100 in 10 seconds flat at a 1960 meet in Zurich. Hary sprinted to the gold medal later that year at the Rome Olympics, the first non-American to win the 100 since Percy Williams turned the trick in 1928.

American sprinter Jim Hines broke the 10-second barrier with a 9.9 at the 1968 U.S. national championships. Months later at the Mexico City Olympics, Hines posted a time of 9.95 to win the gold medal, his sprint ushering in a new era in track and field as the IAAF began recording times electronically, as opposed to using manual stopwatches.

Hines's record went unchallenged for 15 years before American Calvin Smith ran the 100 in 9.93 seconds at a 1983 track meet in Colorado.

Four years later, Canadian Ben Johnson gained instant global fame when he defeated reigning gold-medallist Carl Lewis and set a new record with a 9.83 in the 100 final at the world championships in Rome.

That set the stage for one of the most highly anticipated events in Olympic history: Johnson-Lewis II in the 100 final at the 1988 Seoul Olympics. With a massive television audience watching in suspense, Johnson established a new world record at 9.79 seconds to win the gold medal.

Johnson's resounding victory sparked wild celebrations from Victoria to St. John's. The festivities, however, were short-lived: days after the race, Johnson's urine samples tested positive for the steroid Stanozolol, and he was disqualified for doping.

Johnson was stripped of the gold medal and the IAAF erased both his 1987 and 1988 record-setting times from the record books. Lewis, who clocked 9.92 in Seoul, was now recognized as the world's fastest man.

From this point on, the record fell a fair bit of regularity thanks to improved training methods, better equipment and advanced coaching methods.

"I think events like The Golden League and other world meets that have emerged since the 1980s have led to more and more world-class competitors, and so it wasn't so surprising to see the record fall with more regularity," Steve Ovett, one of England's great middle-distance runners, told CBC Sports Online.

"It's also important not to underestimate the increase in incentives, namely money and commercial opportunities," added Ovett, who won a gold medal in the 800-metres and a bronze in the 1500-metres at the 1980 Games in Moscow.

Lewis and fellow American Leroy Burell traded the world record three times between 1991 and 1994 before Canadian sprinter Donovan Bailey, fresh off his victory in the 100-metres at the 1995 world championships, shocked the world at the 1996 Atlanta Olympics, winning the gold medal in a world-record time of 9.84 seconds.

Bailey's victory went a long way to restore the tarnished image of Canadian athletes in the aftermath of the Ben Johnson debacle.

American Maurice Greene became track and field's new superstar when he won gold in the 100 at the 1997 world championships. Greene successfully defended his title at the 1999 world championships in Athens, eclipsing Bailey's record by clocking 9.79 to become the world's fastest man.

At the 2002 world championship in Paris, Greene lost his world record to fellow American Tim Montgomery, who beat his time by 0.01.

The record, however, was clouded in controversy.

Prior to the 2004 Athens Olympics, the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency accused Montgomery of using illegal performance-enhancing drugs. Montgomery has never failed a drug test and has repeatedly denied taking any banned substances, but he still faces charges based on evidence gathered in the criminal investigation of the BALCO laboratory.

All of which leads us to this past week when Jamaican sprinter Asafa Powell established a new world record with a time of 9.77 seconds in Athens.

"Everyone's been telling me, for a long time now, that I'm the fastest man in the world," Powell said after the race. "I just proved it."

Not only did he become the world's fastest man, Powell also restored a veneer of respectability to a record that has been tarnished by the alleged doping offences of Montgomery.

So, who will be the world's next fastest man?

If recent history is any indication, the record will fall sooner, rather than later.

"Just wait and see," said Powell, who is already eyeing this year's world championships in Helsinki. "You haven't seen the last of it. Who knows? Maybe I'll run nine-something-lower."

Monday, June 23, 2008

HOW tall is he?! OMFG!!!


Leonid Ivanovych Stadnyk (Ukrainian: Леонід Іванович Стадник) (born 1971 in Zhytomyr Oblast, Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic, USSR) is the world's tallest living man, according to Guinness World Records 2008.[1] He is a certified veterinarian and veterinary surgeon and lives with his mother in the village of Podolyantsi, Ukraine. Leonid Stadnyk's excessive growth began after brain surgery when he was 14 years old. He developed a pituitary gland tumor which caused the gland to secrete large amounts of growth hormone, resulting in what doctors describe as acromegalic gigantism.

On August 8, 2007, Guinness book's spokeswoman Amarilis Espinoza stated that in the 2008 edition of the record book, Mr Stadnyk at 2.57m (8 ft 5.2 in), replaces Bao Xishun, a native of Inner Mongolia in China who stands 2.36 m (7 ft 8.9 in). In the past, Stadnyk refused to be measured and consequently denied the GWR recognition. In 2007, the Guinness World Records was permitted to take height measurements, thereby officially recognizing Stadnyk as the world's tallest man.[2] Others have questioned the legitimacy of the record, noting that Stadnyk has never been offically measured by Guinness World Records, only by the "Ukrainian Book of Records," and that the doctor originally credited by Guinness with confirming Stadnyk's height has denied ever measuring him.[3]

A Pravda news report in Spring 2006 reported that Leonid Stadnyk grew 2 cm (0.79 in) in the previous year, not accounting the time between the original Spring 2004 report and Spring 2005. According to Pravda, his health is slowly failing in that he needs to hold on to limbs of trees and the side of his house to walk about.

Twenty years after the surgery, the doctors have discovered the tumour had mysteriously disappeared and he is currently healthy.

Sunday, June 22, 2008

Saturday, June 21, 2008

want to JUMP HIGHER?

Friday, June 20, 2008

What are JUMPSOLES?


Jumpsoles are platforms that attach to your shoes. Jumpsoles may help increase your vertical leap and running speed. They work on strengthening your calf muscle and Achilles tendon, by making you stay on your toes while doing Plyometric exercises. Using Jumpsoles help work muscle in the calf that can’t be worked by just doing Plyometric exercises alone. After using Jumpsoles once it is directed to remember that your legs need at least 48 hour rest to restore the muscle, before additional exercises are done.

Wednesday, June 18, 2008

Banner 17th for the Celtics

Banner Year: 17th Title Reclaims Heart of Championship City

BOSTON, MA - For longer than anyone would care to remember, and during a period where admittedly, too few remembered to care, the Boston Celtics, 16-time World Champions and the NBA's most storied franchise, were just another NBA team.

Tonight the Boston Celtics are World Champions, and for those of us old enough to remember any [or all] of the last 16, a hole in our collective hearts has been filled.

For a city that's seen five other World Championships in just under a decade, as the Celtics add the sixth title since 2002, these luminous times in Boston sports have never been brighter.

Wyc

Wyc Grousbeck holds the trophy aloft for fans in the Garden.
NBAE/Getty

Tonight, Boston is, as U2 would say, the city of blinding lights. And boy, do we look beautiful tonight. With fans still basking in the glow of three Super Bowls and a pair of World Series titles, the Celtics' 17th NBA Championship takes Boston and New England to a level few cities will ever see.

Admit it, when you saw the New England Patriots win their first title on February 3, 2002, you were overwhelmed with pride, but just a little jealous. And when the Red Sox finally snapped an 86-year drought in 2004, it was euphoric, but you looked at a basketball team with less-than-indomitable talents like Jiri Welsch and Mark Blount and doubted the Celtics ever get to this point.

Even with a glass-two-halves full and overflowing optimist outlook, it seemed like a ridiculous stretch. But from Manchester, NH, where basketball hoops went up all over the neighborhood when the Celtics were winning three titles in the 1980s, to outposts in rural Maine where kids cherished their gaudy, one-size-too-small Celtics jacket, NBA basketball once owned Boston while the city's other franchises came tantalizingly close but never quite reached the top of the mountain.

Expect communities across New England, not to mention transplants from Manhattan to Manhattan Beach. to renew their long-lost love affair with Boston Celtics. If you've been driving an empty bandwagon through the passing of Red Auerbach, 24-win seasons, Jerome Moiso jerseys, draft lotteries and summer league box scores, it's time to expect company. And that's not a bad thing. After all, why else were total strangers embracing in the stands at TD Banknorth Garden tonight and high-fiving at Sonny McLean's in Santa Monica, California, a Boston sports stronghold in the heart of Lakers country?

It's simple. Humans like company, and shared experiences like watching the Celtics knock off their most hated rivals engenders a sense of pride between the best of friends and the most perfect of strangers. It brings us closer together.

A lot of things had to happen to get the Boston Celtics to this point, and sure, luck played a part, but this championship, more than anything, reflects the hard work of basketball players who sacrificed for each other on the court, and a front office that came up with a plan and hired the smartest people it could find to pull it off.

There's a lot of sweat-equity, thought-equity and old-fashioned financial equity, invested in this championship team.

You'll probably read a handful of stories today marveling about how the Celtics have returned to glory in the span of a year, but nothing could be further from the truth. The resurrection began when ownership changed hands in September of 2002, and a group of people who loved the team decided they would restore the franchise.

You may know this team as the Boston Celtics, but every other Thursday, there's a group of people working in Boston and Waltham depositing paychecks from Banner Seventeen, LLC, daring to dream out loud about the next chapter in the Celtics' legacy.

As of press time, there's no word on when the company will rename itself, but after a little bit of well-earned celebration, the focus will soon shift -- where else? -- to Banner 18.

There were bumps along the way; certainly mistakes were made and well chronicled, but ultimately, the organization's philosophy of building a strong business off the court to put the team in position to field a championship-caliber basketball team on the court paid off.

When you celebrate this championship, you have to think about Danny Ainge, a feisty member of the 1986 team who was entrusted with the team's basketball operations and faced many potentially franchise-altering decisions. Inheriting an aging team that had made an improbable run to the Eastern Conference Finals in 2002, Ainge blew the team up and started the rebuilding process, trading a mercurial star in Antoine Walker who'd become the face of the franchise and opting to instead build around Paul Pierce, who was just coming into his own.

Meanwhile, Ainge began accumulating draft picks and young talent in the hopes of one day being in a position to make the Celtics a championship contender. Along the way, the team developed some talented players while trying to bring in character veterans. The young Celtics took their lumps, as did Ainge, Doc Rivers and everyone associated with the team. Pierce began to lose faith and started to reconsider his future with the Celtics, placing the team at the crossroads a little quicker than anyone had probably imagined.

Thanks to developing situations in Seattle and Minnesota, though, the timing couldn't have been better. Ainge rolled the dice, dealing youth for experience, and the summer of 2007 turned up aces. Ray Allen and Kevin Garnett were suddenly joining Pierce in Boston, the team was back on the NBA map, and free agents started lining up to join the fray.

Pundits figured the Celtics would need some time to gel and figure it out. Next year, they said, would be the Celtics' time. But the team started playing together informally a month before training camp, traveled to Rome, and while Ubuntu wasn't built in a day, it was definitely underway.

Sixty-six regular season wins later, the Celtics were THE story of the postseason, and the Celtics' time was now. Sixteen postseason wins later, after dismissing Zaza, LeBron, Chauncey and Kobe, the Boston Celtics are World Champions.

In the city of blinding lights, it's time for the blinding bling of trophies and rings. It's been a banner year, in every sense of the word.

Monday, June 16, 2008

Physics June 16,2008 MONDAY

JUNE 16,2008 (MONDAY)
Physics

Friday, June 13, 2008

Math Logic Link (June 13, 2008)

JUNE 13, 2008 (FRIDAY)
MATH 422
Sir Ronald Ryan Olarte
1:30pm-2:30pm
math-logic.doc

Tuesday, June 3, 2008

IMPORTANT GUIDELINES:

RED -> links...
WHITE-> visited links...

Monday, June 2, 2008

Announcement!!


We officially started the blogging and helping everyone in the Computer Studies Division....
we will start to post the latest java learnings we had....we will also include codes and tutorials for the C programming for the new comers in this division...(we'll try)...We also provide the presentation slides of our other subjects in this course (BS-IT2)...

This address(addu-info.blogspot.com) is not a property of AdDU ....


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