Friday, 30 May 2014

14) Sir Jamshed Avari Deputy Editor Of CHIP Say me in email About A Google!

Dear Bittu,

Thanks for your mail. Yes, to answer your question, there's no reason to believe a better search engine can't be made. Things are always changing, and in fact something completely different might come along and make Google search antiquated, just like people are gravitating towards different methods of communication, different services, etc, over time. Apart from the possibility of improving upon Google's mathematic algorithms for determining results, It's possible that someone might innovate in voice or image-based search, or something optimized for mobiles, touchscreens, anything. The only consideration is whether they would be able to market themselves and gain a following quickly enough.

Regards,
Jamshed Avari
Deputy Editor,
CHIP
---

 https://plus.google.com/107568688413984703159


Respected Sir
Jamshed Avari
(Editor Of Chip Magazine, Journalist)


I would Like one Question Can a Better Search Engine Than Google Be Made?


Awaiting reply
Have a nice day;

Yours Respectfully
Bittu Gandhi
(Author, Website Developer, Researcher, Record Holder)
(India)

Wednesday, 28 May 2014

13) 2) Read Miracle Of The Godiji Parshwanath! Really Believe Or Not! (Wikki)

Godiji Parshwanath ((Hindi: श्री गोडीजी पार्श्वनाथ)) is the name given to several images of the Jain Tirthankar Parshwananth in India, and to the temple where it is the main deity (mulanayaka). Parshwanath was the 23rd Tirthankara who attained nirvana in 777 BCE.
The original image, about 1.5 feet high, was at Gori in Tharparkar district of Pakistan. The original temple still stands, but is empty.[1] It is in village of Gori between Islamkot and Nagarparkar.[2]

   
Shri Godiji Parshwanth, Mumbai
Shri Godiji Parshwanth, Mumbai
Shri Godiji Parshwanth, Mumbai
Coordinates:18°58′30″N 72°49′33″E / 18.97500°N 72.82583°E / 18.97500; 72.82583Coordinates: 18°58′30″N 72°49′33″E / 18.97500°N 72.82583°E / 18.97500; 72.82583
Name
Devanagari:श्री गोडीजी पार्श्वनाथ
Sanskrit transliteration:Śrī Godījī Parsvanath
Location
Country:India
State/province:Mumbai
Locale:Pydhonie
Architecture and culture
Primary deity:Parsvanath
Important festivals:Mahavir Jayanti
Number of temples:1
Date established:1812

Godiji Parshwanth Temple in Mumbai.

Among the images that bear the name Godiji Parshwanth, the best known is Godiji Parshvanath in the Pydhuni locality of Bombay.[3] It was established in beginning of the eighteenth century in the Fort area. The image is said to have been brought from Hamirpur in Sirohi district in Rajasthan.
in 1877, Seth Amichand of Khambhat settled in Mumbai and constructed a griha jinalaya.[4] The temple was moved in samvat 1859 (1803 CE) to Pydhuni locality because of a fire. In 1811, his sons Nemchand and Modishah acquired the current site, and in 1812 the pratishtha ceremony was conducted. The brick and wood structure was complete replaced by a three story marble structure in 1989. Its 200th anniversary is being celebrated during April 15-May 12. 2012.[5]
A stamp commemorating this celebration was released by Milind Deora, the Minister of State for Communications and IT, on April 17, 2012.[6]
On this occasion, a four volume directory of ancient manuscripts was released.[7]
A massive community feast for 800,000 individuals has been organized. Sweets accompanying an invitation has been sent to 1,34,000 families.[8] The ingredients include 1,50,000 kilo mango juice, 30,000 kilo wheat flour and 2000 kilo red chillies.[9]

Other Godiji Parshwanth Temples.

Other Godiji Parshwanth temples are at Pune,[10] Mohbatnagar, Shivnagar, Falaudi, Laaj,Gohili, Jalore, Sanchor Ahmedabad, Jamnagar, Hyderabad, Guntur, Chitradurga etc.

The original Gori Temple (گوری مندر) in Tharparkar[edit]

For several centuries, the temple at Goripur was a celebrated Jain tirtha. A account of its building is contained in "Gaudi Parshvanath Stavan" by Pritivimala,[11] composed in Samvat 1650 and "Shri Gaudi Parshvanath Stavan" written by Nemavijaya in Samvat 1807.[12]
According to Muni Darshanvijaya,[13] it was installed by Seth Godidas of Jhinjhuvad and was consecreted by Acharya Hemachandra at Patan in Samvat 1228. It was brought to Patan and was buried underground for safekeeping during a period of disturbance. It was rediscovered in Samvat 1432 (1375-6 AD)and was stored in the stable of the local ruler.
According to the old texts, a merchant Megha Sa from Nagarparkar acquired the image by paying 125 dramma or 500 pieces (taka) and brought to Nagarparkar, where it was formally reconsecreted by Acharya Merutunga Suri of Anchala Gachchha. Later, according to instructions he received in a dream, he settled a new town at Godipur and constructed a temple in samvat 1444, thus establishing the Godi Parshvanth Tirth. The construction was supervised by an architect from Sirohi. The shikhar of the temple was completed by his son Mahio.
The tirth became famous and was visited by the Jains from afar.
It was visited by Stanley Napier Raikes in 1854.[14] Raikes met local Jains to compile recent history and consulted a Jain Yati Goorjee Kuntvujajee at Bodhesar, who had manuscripts describing the history of the temple.
In AD 1716, the local chief Soda Sutojee moved the image from the temple to a fort. The image used to buried underground at a secret location for safekeeping, and used to be taken out time to time with great elebration. Raikes write that thousands of monks and hundreds of thousands of ordinary people assembled for the fairs held in 1764, 1788, 1796, 1810, 1822 and 1824 for the idol’s exhibition.[15] In AD 1832, the chief Soda Poonjajee, who was the only person who knew the location of the image, was captured by the ex-Ameers and died in captivity. The image was never seen again.
The temple was later damaged in the battle between Colonel Tyrwhitt and a local Sodha chief, who had taken shelter at the temple.
The temple was inspected the Archaeological Survey of India in 1879.[16] The report refers to it having been built in Samvat 1432.[17] An inscription of 1715 was noted mentioning repairs made.[18]
Jain Muni Vidyavijayaji visited Sindh in 1937.[19] He notes that the temple was empty, and had decayed. A local Bhil served as a guard. At that time there were still many Jain families in towns near Nagarparkar. During India's partition in 1947, the Jains left and the temple became inaccessible to the Jain community.
Gori Temple Architecture: The Gori temple was constructed in the classical medieval style. The main structure (mula prasad) with a shikhara is surrounded by 52 subsidiary shrines (devakulikas), just like the Vimala Vasahi at Mt. Abu. It is termed Dvi-Saptati or Bavan Jinalaya by Nandalal Chunilal Somapura in the Sanskrit text JinaPrasad-Martanda.[20] Like Vimala Vasahi, each of the 52 shrines are topped with a low dome. There is a bhonyra (underground chamber) like some of the old temples in North India.
The shrines are now empty. However the paintings in the 12-column ranga-mandap at the front gate are well preserved. An upper band shows people worshiping the Tirthankaras. Two of the bands below show processions with horses, elephants, planquins, chariots, indoor and outdoor scenes etc. and one of the bands has paintings of the Tirthankaras. Such paintings are now quite rare, since paintings of this period in India have generarally been painted over.

"Really This Is The Miracle Of Shree Godi Parshwanath! Lord Parshwanath Is Too Miracle And Powerful God in Jain Religion. Every One Knows Parshwanath God Is Too Powerful Than Others God. This is the secret! Even Shree Krishna Was Chanted Shree Parswanath And Rise Of God Shenkhesvar Parshwanath! I Read This Story. And Most Of Time I Feel  The Miracles Shree Parshwanath!" Bittu Gandhi

Descendants of the builders.

According to traditional accounts, compiled in early 20th century by Yati Ramlal Gani,[21] the members of the Gothi clan of Oswals are the descendants of Megha Sa. They now live in various part of India.[22]
There are many remains of Jain temples in Nagarparkar region. Several Oswal clans trace their descent from this region.

Sunday, 18 May 2014

12) Apple, Google settle smartphone patent litigation! India Today .

Apple Inc and Google Inc's Motorola Mobility unit have agreed to settle all patent litigation between them over smartphones, ending one of the highest-profile lawsuits in technology.
In a joint statement on Friday, the companies said the settlement does not include a cross license to their respective patents.
"Apple and Google have also agreed to work together in some areas of patent reform," the statement said.
Apple iPhones
Apple iPhones
Apple and companies that make phones using Google's Android software have filed dozens of such lawsuits against one another around the world to protect their technology. Apple co-founder Steve Jobs called Android a "stolen product."

Google and Apple informed a federal appeals court in Washington that their cases against each other should be dismissed, according to filings on Friday. However, the deal does not
apply to
Apple's litigation against Samsung Electronics Co Ltd.

Apple has battled Google and what once were the largest adopters of its Android mobile software, partly to try to curb the rapid expansion of the free, rival operating system.
But it has been unable to slow Android's ascendancy, which is now installed on an estimated 80 percent of new phones sold every year. Motorola, the U.S. company that pioneered the mobile phone, no longer ranks among the biggest smartphone makers.
Both Motorola and HTC Corp have been eclipsed by Chinese Android adopters such as Lenovo Group Ltd - which is buying Motorola - and Huawei and Xiaomi.
The most high-profile case between Apple and Motorola began in 2010. Motorola accused Apple of infringing several patents, including one essential to how cellphones operate on a 3G network, while Apple said Motorola violated its patents to certain smartphone features.
The cases were consolidated in a Chicago federal court. However, Judge Richard Posner dismissed it in 2012 shortly before trial, saying neither company had sufficient evidence to prove its case. Last month, the appeals court gave the iPhone manufacturer another chance to win a sales ban against Motorola.
Apple's biggest victory against Android came against Samsung, where U.S. juries have awarded Apple more than $1 billion in damages. Those verdicts are on appeal, and despite years of court challenges to Android, Apple has not been able to win a crippling sales injunction.
Google acquired Motorola Mobility in 2012 for $12.5 billion, and this year announced it was selling Motorola Mobility's handset business to Lenovo, while keeping the vast majority of the patents.
The case at the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit is Apple Inc vs. Motorola Mobility, case number 2012-1528, -1549. (Reporting by Dan Levine; Editing by Andre Grenon and Mohammad Zargham)

Monday, 12 May 2014

11) Gmail's next overhaul is radical and will make it look more like Google Plus. By The Guardian News Paper.


 

Leaked screenshots of redesign show a simplified home screen that will be the biggest change since the service began in 2004
Gmail envelope on a desk
An envelope styled to resemble the Gmail logo. Photograph: Cairo/flickr

Gmail is thought to be undergoing a redesign that will radically change the way people interact with Google email.
The interface change, revealed by leaked screenshots of a test version published by technology site Geek.com, shows a shift towards the simplified design already used by the Google Plus social network and Google’s intelligent digital assistant Google Now.
It could be the biggest change in the way Gmail looks and operates since the service was created in 2004.

Removing clutter

The design focuses on Google’s search, which can be used to find and highlight emails in a long list, replacing the need to file email in folders or categories. The cluttered sidebar that contained email labels, folders and Google’s Hangouts instant messaging service has been removed in favour of a sliding menu, already used by Google’s social network and other Google services.
Gmail redesign
Google's simplified interface for Gmail. Photograph: Geek.com
Buttons for composing a new email, setting reminders and other quick actions are now in the bottom right-hand cover, and the tabbed interface that allows users to switch between email, contacts and tasks has been removed. Google Hangouts now drops down from a menu in the right-hand top corner. Google’s starred emails, which are used to flag important conversations, have been replaced by “pins”. Emails can also be snoozed, to be returned to the top of the inbox at a later date.
Google has only made small, gradual additions and changes to Gmail in the past, with some changes remaining entirely optional for years for its 425-million-plus users.
It is possible that the redesign is an internal Google change that will not be released to the public, but it appears to match that of leaked design change of Google’s mobile email interface. It also brings Google’s email service more into line with newer Google online services in look and workflow.
Google declined to comment on the redesign.