Tuesday, December 6, 2016
Sunday, November 6, 2016
Buy Granite Stone GNTS011 At Print Haat
By bestsexologistindelhi9:09 PMbuy cushions online cheap in india, Buy family photo frames Online, Buy Leather Mobile Cover For Yu, Buy online photo frames In Delhi, Buy Photo Frames OnlineNo comments

Express your love and affection with this stylish granite stone decorative.
GNTS011
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GNTS011
Product Code: GNTS011
Availability: In Stock
RS.1,199.00
Qty 1
Tags: Granite Stone, Decorative Stone, Stone
Buy Leather Mobile Cover For Yu,Buy Photo Frames Online,Buy family photo frames Online,Buy online photo frames In Delhi,buy cushions online cheap in india
Monday, August 29, 2016
Buying Bonsai Plant In A Store Or Online Shop
By bestsexologistindelhi10:26 PMBuy bonsai plants online in gurgaon, Buy plants in gurgaon, Buy plants online in gurgaon, Gift a plant online in gurgaon, Plant nurseries in gurgaon, Send plants online in gurgaonNo comments

Most Bonsai enthusiasts started their hobby with a ready-made Bonsai Plant, bought in a Bonsai shop or received as a present. Although you will not experience the fun of creating your own tree, it is a great way to get started and get a feeling for the basic care for Bonsai trees. Once you get enthusiastic about Bonsai you can eventually learn growing them yourself.
Buy Feng Shui Plants
Where and how to buy a Bonsai Plant?
Most large garden centers sell low-priced Bonsai trees, although these are usually not of high quality. Many specialized (online) Bonsai shops sell Bonsai trees as well, though at slightly higher prices. Check this for a store near you; Bonsai Plant for sale.
How?
Some basic advice for buying Bonsai trees:
Do not start with buying a species of tree that is hard to care for; it is recommended for beginners to start with an easy-to-care for tree. Check our Bonsai Plants species guide or ask before purchasing a tree!
Buy a tree that is suitable for the place where you intend to put it; only indoor (sub-tropical) trees will do well indoors, just like outdoor trees will only do well when placed outside (check the list of recommendable species below)
Do not forget to ask what species of tree you bought; this is important to look up information about how to care for it properly.
Check the pot for damage.
Buy plants in gurgaon,Plant nurseries in gurgaon,Gift a plant online in gurgaon,Buy plants online in gurgaon,Send plants online in gurgaon,Buy bonsai plants online in gurgaon,Buy bonsai plants in gurgaon,Bonsai plants for sale in gurgaon
Buy Feng Shui Plants
Where and how to buy a Bonsai Plant?
Most large garden centers sell low-priced Bonsai trees, although these are usually not of high quality. Many specialized (online) Bonsai shops sell Bonsai trees as well, though at slightly higher prices. Check this for a store near you; Bonsai Plant for sale.
How?
Some basic advice for buying Bonsai trees:
Do not start with buying a species of tree that is hard to care for; it is recommended for beginners to start with an easy-to-care for tree. Check our Bonsai Plants species guide or ask before purchasing a tree!
Buy a tree that is suitable for the place where you intend to put it; only indoor (sub-tropical) trees will do well indoors, just like outdoor trees will only do well when placed outside (check the list of recommendable species below)
Do not forget to ask what species of tree you bought; this is important to look up information about how to care for it properly.
Check the pot for damage.
Buy plants in gurgaon,Plant nurseries in gurgaon,Gift a plant online in gurgaon,Buy plants online in gurgaon,Send plants online in gurgaon,Buy bonsai plants online in gurgaon,Buy bonsai plants in gurgaon,Bonsai plants for sale in gurgaon
Wednesday, July 13, 2016
Mbp Bearings: Deep Grove Ball Bearing
By bestsexologistindelhi2:39 AMCylindrical Roller Bearings Supplier India, indian roller bearings suppliers, Industrial Bearing Suppliers India, Taper Roller Bearings Supplier, Taper Roller Bearings Supplier IndiaNo comments

A ball bearing is a type of rolling-element bearing that uses balls to maintain the separation between the bearing races.The purpose of a ball bearing is to reduce rotational friction and support radial and axial loads. It achieves this by using at least two races to contain the balls and transmit the loads through the balls. In most applications, one race is stationary and the other is attached to the rotating assembly (e.g., a hub or shaft). As one of the bearing races rotates it causes the balls to rotate as well. Because the balls are rolling they have a much lower coefficient of friction than if two flat surfaces were sliding against each other.
Ball bearings tend to have lower load capacity for their size than other kinds of rolling-element bearings due to the smaller contact area between the balls and races. However, they can tolerate some misalignment of the inner and outer races.MBP use improved ball quality to so to provide noise free bearings and smooth running MBP ball bearings have an optimized surface finish on all the contact surfaces to provide the sufficient lubrications this allows the bearings to run cooler and last longer
About Mbp-Bearings
MBP BEARING is eminent manufacturer of a range of high-quality anti-friction Bearings. Our company maintains high standards of efficiency and assure clients that the offered products are highly dependable. For us, quality has always been an integral part and culture of our organization and stringent efforts are made to ensure that the customers get value for their money.Our Plant is certified to ISO 9001:2008. Moreover, we are backed by the services of experienced and highly skilled technocrats belonging to the field of manufacturing bearings, who use sophisticated modern Machinery & Equipment.
Ball bearings tend to have lower load capacity for their size than other kinds of rolling-element bearings due to the smaller contact area between the balls and races. However, they can tolerate some misalignment of the inner and outer races.MBP use improved ball quality to so to provide noise free bearings and smooth running MBP ball bearings have an optimized surface finish on all the contact surfaces to provide the sufficient lubrications this allows the bearings to run cooler and last longer
About Mbp-Bearings
MBP BEARING is eminent manufacturer of a range of high-quality anti-friction Bearings. Our company maintains high standards of efficiency and assure clients that the offered products are highly dependable. For us, quality has always been an integral part and culture of our organization and stringent efforts are made to ensure that the customers get value for their money.Our Plant is certified to ISO 9001:2008. Moreover, we are backed by the services of experienced and highly skilled technocrats belonging to the field of manufacturing bearings, who use sophisticated modern Machinery & Equipment.
Wednesday, June 8, 2016
Tamil Nadu Welfare Politics Is Being Copied In Other States Since It Yield Rich Electoral Dividends
By bestsexologistindelhi10:22 PMAmma canteens, Amma idlis, Amma medicine, Amma salt, Amma water, J Jayalalithaa, Jharkhand, Tamil Nadu, Tamil Nadu politics, Uttar PradeshNo comments

What struck me the most on my recent visit to Tamil Nadu during the assembly election campaign were the Amma canteens. The canteens are not new and have been part of the Tamil Nadu landscape for years. Nor are they universal. They exist only in Chennai and some other towns. But they symbolise the welfare politics of Tamil Nadu as little else does.
I went into one of them — more than 300 of them dot Chennai — to sample for myself the food they dish out. It was 8:20 in the evening. The hall was absolutely clean. So were the counters and the huge vessels that contained dal and chapatis. One of the three women there — they were wearing clean aprons and a head gear and had cooked the meal, served it, and took the money — dished out dal and two chapatis in a shining stainless steel thali, taking Rs 3. It could have been dal cooked at home.
The next day I went there at lunchtime, this time opting to have dahi bhat, also for Rs 3, the sambhar-rice costing Rs 5. And the food was piping hot. (An idli costs Rs 1 and the state apparently subsidises it by 68 paise.)
What struck me was not the availability of cheap food but its quality. Even the ration shops provide reasonably good quality rice, 20 kg free every month to cardholders. Many maintain that its quality was “75 per cent” of what was available in the open market, with items like tuar dal available for Rs 30 a kg (outside it’s sold for Rs 180) and sugar for Rs 13 a kg (Rs 40 outside).
Ensuring a certain quality of food reflected a respect for the poor. There was dignity in the way it was distributed, not like crumbs thrown at those who ate, or rotting food infested with bugs adding insult to deprivation as we have seen in public distribution system (PDS) outlets in several parts of the country.
Voting in Freebies But then, social egalitarianism was the basis of the two Dravidian parties that came out of the womb of Periyar’s anti-Brahmanical movement. The seeds of that thinking remain, despite the rampant corruption and autocratic rule that have taken over Tamil Nadu politics with welfarism degenerating into buying votes with cash — the flip side of the story.
The second striking aspect of Tamil Nadu’s welfare politics that has been followed by both the AIADMK and the DMK over the years is the efficiency with which the state’s ‘steel frame’ delivers the benefits. On the face of it, it seems to be more efficient than the bureaucracies in other parts of the country, particularly in the northern states.
There may be many reasons for this, but one thing is clear. When there is a strong political leadership at the top, the officials play ball. Whatever her other faults, like not brooking dissent or the propagation of her cult through every social programme — Amma salt, Amma idlis, Amma medicine, Amma water, and it has started to create a reaction among the educated young — CM J Jayalalithaa is known to be a good administrator who does her homework before every meeting and insists on accountability from her officials.
Amma has enjoyed a certain credibility about delivering on promises she makes at poll time. An expert in one of Chennai’s top development agencies remarked with touching faith the other day that if only the increased levels of anaemia among women in Tamil Nadu could be brought to Jayalalithaa’s notice, correctives would be put in place.
He was referring to an increase in female anaemia in the state shown in the National Family Health Survey 4, considering Tamil Nadu is way ahead of other states in most human development indices. The moment Jayalalithaa was sworn in this time, she made her way to Fort St George to redeem some of her poll pledges, including a loan waiver to farmers, providing 100 units of free electricity and shutting 500 liquor shops to silence her opponents who had made total prohibition an issue.
Today, Tamil Nadu’s welfare politics is being copied in other states because it yields rich electoral dividends. Uttar Pradesh has gone in for the doubly fortified salt (iron and iodine) in several districts as a pilot, the model being Amma salt. Jharkhand is reviving its ‘Dal-Bhat’ scheme of Rs 5-a-meal for the poor. But these states will do well to remember the other prerequisites for the success of Tamil Nadu’s social schemes: a strong political leadership, political stability provided by a virtual two-party system, and a bureaucracy that delivers.
Dry State of Revenues The ‘good politics versus bad economics’ argument is not new. This time, Amma, committed to phasing out the liquor business that was a cash cow, faces the challenge of generating resources from other sources for her ‘freebies’ in a Budget-deficit, although prosperous, state.
At the end of the day, it boils down to priorities. Thanks to ‘welfarism’, few in Tamil Nadu need go hungry today. Surely, this should have happened after seven decades of independence across the country.
And it goes without saying that for good economics to flourish in a democracy, one must first have good politics firmly in place.
I went into one of them — more than 300 of them dot Chennai — to sample for myself the food they dish out. It was 8:20 in the evening. The hall was absolutely clean. So were the counters and the huge vessels that contained dal and chapatis. One of the three women there — they were wearing clean aprons and a head gear and had cooked the meal, served it, and took the money — dished out dal and two chapatis in a shining stainless steel thali, taking Rs 3. It could have been dal cooked at home.
The next day I went there at lunchtime, this time opting to have dahi bhat, also for Rs 3, the sambhar-rice costing Rs 5. And the food was piping hot. (An idli costs Rs 1 and the state apparently subsidises it by 68 paise.)
What struck me was not the availability of cheap food but its quality. Even the ration shops provide reasonably good quality rice, 20 kg free every month to cardholders. Many maintain that its quality was “75 per cent” of what was available in the open market, with items like tuar dal available for Rs 30 a kg (outside it’s sold for Rs 180) and sugar for Rs 13 a kg (Rs 40 outside).
Ensuring a certain quality of food reflected a respect for the poor. There was dignity in the way it was distributed, not like crumbs thrown at those who ate, or rotting food infested with bugs adding insult to deprivation as we have seen in public distribution system (PDS) outlets in several parts of the country.
Voting in Freebies But then, social egalitarianism was the basis of the two Dravidian parties that came out of the womb of Periyar’s anti-Brahmanical movement. The seeds of that thinking remain, despite the rampant corruption and autocratic rule that have taken over Tamil Nadu politics with welfarism degenerating into buying votes with cash — the flip side of the story.
The second striking aspect of Tamil Nadu’s welfare politics that has been followed by both the AIADMK and the DMK over the years is the efficiency with which the state’s ‘steel frame’ delivers the benefits. On the face of it, it seems to be more efficient than the bureaucracies in other parts of the country, particularly in the northern states.
There may be many reasons for this, but one thing is clear. When there is a strong political leadership at the top, the officials play ball. Whatever her other faults, like not brooking dissent or the propagation of her cult through every social programme — Amma salt, Amma idlis, Amma medicine, Amma water, and it has started to create a reaction among the educated young — CM J Jayalalithaa is known to be a good administrator who does her homework before every meeting and insists on accountability from her officials.
Amma has enjoyed a certain credibility about delivering on promises she makes at poll time. An expert in one of Chennai’s top development agencies remarked with touching faith the other day that if only the increased levels of anaemia among women in Tamil Nadu could be brought to Jayalalithaa’s notice, correctives would be put in place.
He was referring to an increase in female anaemia in the state shown in the National Family Health Survey 4, considering Tamil Nadu is way ahead of other states in most human development indices. The moment Jayalalithaa was sworn in this time, she made her way to Fort St George to redeem some of her poll pledges, including a loan waiver to farmers, providing 100 units of free electricity and shutting 500 liquor shops to silence her opponents who had made total prohibition an issue.
Today, Tamil Nadu’s welfare politics is being copied in other states because it yields rich electoral dividends. Uttar Pradesh has gone in for the doubly fortified salt (iron and iodine) in several districts as a pilot, the model being Amma salt. Jharkhand is reviving its ‘Dal-Bhat’ scheme of Rs 5-a-meal for the poor. But these states will do well to remember the other prerequisites for the success of Tamil Nadu’s social schemes: a strong political leadership, political stability provided by a virtual two-party system, and a bureaucracy that delivers.
Dry State of Revenues The ‘good politics versus bad economics’ argument is not new. This time, Amma, committed to phasing out the liquor business that was a cash cow, faces the challenge of generating resources from other sources for her ‘freebies’ in a Budget-deficit, although prosperous, state.
At the end of the day, it boils down to priorities. Thanks to ‘welfarism’, few in Tamil Nadu need go hungry today. Surely, this should have happened after seven decades of independence across the country.
And it goes without saying that for good economics to flourish in a democracy, one must first have good politics firmly in place.
Wednesday, May 25, 2016
Facebook Co-Founder Eduardo Saverin Starts B-Capital To Invest In Asian Startups
By bestsexologistindelhi10:54 PMB Capital, Comcast Ventures, Eduardo Saverin, Evidation Health, Gavin Teo, Ninja Van, Raj Ganguly, San Francisco, Silicon ValleyNo comments

B Capital, a fund founded by Eduardo Saverin — yup, known more popularly recognised as one of the facebook co-founders — and Raj Ganguly, a prominent investor who worked with Saverin on his previous Velos, has announced that it has successfully closed an initial $143.6 million according to US filings extracted.
The company, that has been based in Singapore and has an office in San Francisco, being lead by Singaporean national Gavin Teo from Comcast Ventures. This division of the company has allowed it to make its presence in the Silicon Valley. The company’s investments currently include logistics firm Ninja Van, which recently closed a $30 million round and digital health startup Evidation Health.
The main aim of the new fund is to supply capital into emerging markets in Southeast Asia and India. The founders believe that these regions would be raised a lot in their value if served properly. Saverin and Ganguly add that a particular challenging phase for a startup is during the raising of Series B and C fundings when not many investors are ready to share.
The fund strongly believes that innovation can come from anywhere and it is primarily aiming to invest in companies that can come up with innovative ideas and solutions.
Explaining how much potential the market has, the founders of B Capital write,
According to the IMF, India’s GDP stood at roughly US$2.1 trillion, with a 1.3 billion population. Southeast Asia as a region has 628 million people and commands a GDP of roughly US$2.4 trillion. To put things in perspective, the U.S. population is roughly 320 million people but has an enormous $18 trillion economy. Still, both India and Southeast Asia represent vast market potential. India is projected to grow at 5.9% between 2014 – 2018 and Southeast Asia at 5.4%. That is double the average U.S. growth rate of 2.5%.
According to Saverin and Ganguly, the first close has seen the fund pull in nearly 60 percent of its target money. Taking that into perspective, we can observe that the closing stock may be just under $250 million.
The founders further add,
B Capital, being located in both established and new innovation centers of the world, is uniquely positioned to cultivate such exchanges and learnings. And through our exclusive partnership with the Boston Consulting Group, we bring both our venture DNA and a true global network to help startups overcome their inflexion points and accelerate their growth curve.
The company, that has been based in Singapore and has an office in San Francisco, being lead by Singaporean national Gavin Teo from Comcast Ventures. This division of the company has allowed it to make its presence in the Silicon Valley. The company’s investments currently include logistics firm Ninja Van, which recently closed a $30 million round and digital health startup Evidation Health.
The main aim of the new fund is to supply capital into emerging markets in Southeast Asia and India. The founders believe that these regions would be raised a lot in their value if served properly. Saverin and Ganguly add that a particular challenging phase for a startup is during the raising of Series B and C fundings when not many investors are ready to share.
The fund strongly believes that innovation can come from anywhere and it is primarily aiming to invest in companies that can come up with innovative ideas and solutions.
See More Business News At Dailybouncer.com
Explaining how much potential the market has, the founders of B Capital write,
According to the IMF, India’s GDP stood at roughly US$2.1 trillion, with a 1.3 billion population. Southeast Asia as a region has 628 million people and commands a GDP of roughly US$2.4 trillion. To put things in perspective, the U.S. population is roughly 320 million people but has an enormous $18 trillion economy. Still, both India and Southeast Asia represent vast market potential. India is projected to grow at 5.9% between 2014 – 2018 and Southeast Asia at 5.4%. That is double the average U.S. growth rate of 2.5%.
According to Saverin and Ganguly, the first close has seen the fund pull in nearly 60 percent of its target money. Taking that into perspective, we can observe that the closing stock may be just under $250 million.
The founders further add,
B Capital, being located in both established and new innovation centers of the world, is uniquely positioned to cultivate such exchanges and learnings. And through our exclusive partnership with the Boston Consulting Group, we bring both our venture DNA and a true global network to help startups overcome their inflexion points and accelerate their growth curve.
Monday, April 25, 2016
Jemima Sumgong Wins London Marathon Despite Heavy Fall
By bestsexologistindelhi10:22 PMEthiopian Tigist Tufa, Jemima Sumgong, Kenya, London Marathon, Paula Radcliffe, River Thames, Women Elite RaceNo comments

Jemima Sumgong, of Kenya, won the women's London Marathon on Sunday after picking herself off the ground following a heavy fall near the end of the race.
The 31-year-old Sumgong held her head in pain after the fall but recovered to defeat last year's winner, Ethiopian Tigist Tufa, in a duel over the final mile, clocking an unofficial 2 hours 22 minutes 58 seconds. Ethiopean athlete Tigist Tufa won the same category last year in 2015 with 2 hours 23 minutes 21 seconds.
British runner Paula Radcliffe set the women's world record in 2003 with 2 hours 15 minutes 25 seconds, which also stands as the current course record in the Women's Elite Race. Women’s Elite Race records in London Marathon have been set seven times since the beginning of the races.
The London Marathon, one of the six World Marathon Majors, has been contested by men and women annually since 29 March 1981. Set over a largely flat course around the River Thames, the marathon is 42.2 km in length and generally regarded as a competitive and unpredictable event, and conducive to fast times.
See More: Sports News, Health News, Offer, Deal
The 31-year-old Sumgong held her head in pain after the fall but recovered to defeat last year's winner, Ethiopian Tigist Tufa, in a duel over the final mile, clocking an unofficial 2 hours 22 minutes 58 seconds. Ethiopean athlete Tigist Tufa won the same category last year in 2015 with 2 hours 23 minutes 21 seconds.
British runner Paula Radcliffe set the women's world record in 2003 with 2 hours 15 minutes 25 seconds, which also stands as the current course record in the Women's Elite Race. Women’s Elite Race records in London Marathon have been set seven times since the beginning of the races.
The London Marathon, one of the six World Marathon Majors, has been contested by men and women annually since 29 March 1981. Set over a largely flat course around the River Thames, the marathon is 42.2 km in length and generally regarded as a competitive and unpredictable event, and conducive to fast times.
See More: Sports News, Health News, Offer, Deal
Tuesday, March 29, 2016
GetLinks Raises $500K Funds To Connect Tech Talent With Employers
By bestsexologistindelhi12:15 AMCyberAgent Ventures, GetLinks, Google, Lazada, Southeast Asia, UberNo comments

Bangkok-based startup GetLinks has just closed a $500K seed round, with money from 500 Startups and CyberAgent Ventures.
The startup, which mainly serves Southeast Asia, started off as a kind of “Tinder for jobs” and has now transitioned to a curated job platform that serves both employer and job candidate by providing high-quality jobs and employees. It has to do so, since GetLinks makes money mainly by taking a cut out of the employee’s salary.
GetLinks is unique in its focus in offline events, like meetups that attract thousands of attendees to raise awareness of its service to both employers and employees all around Southeast Asia. The startup has only been holding such events in Thailand, but it plans to have its first Vietnam meetup on March 12. GetLink’s current employer partners include Google, Uber, and Lazada.
The startup, which mainly serves Southeast Asia, started off as a kind of “Tinder for jobs” and has now transitioned to a curated job platform that serves both employer and job candidate by providing high-quality jobs and employees. It has to do so, since GetLinks makes money mainly by taking a cut out of the employee’s salary.
GetLinks is unique in its focus in offline events, like meetups that attract thousands of attendees to raise awareness of its service to both employers and employees all around Southeast Asia. The startup has only been holding such events in Thailand, but it plans to have its first Vietnam meetup on March 12. GetLink’s current employer partners include Google, Uber, and Lazada.