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Sarah Abdullah and Sachin Pilot
Sarah Abdullah and Sachin Pilot
Sachin and Sarah's lovestory is the stuff of movies! He's the son of late Congress member Rajesh Pilot and she the daughter of ex-CM of Jammu and Kashmir Farooq Abdullah. Hindu boy, Muslim girl. A torrid affair, familial disapproval, a secret wedding. Both are young and charismatic, have studied abroad and come from powerful political backgrounds -- they score on the glam list for sure!
Portable Shutter Island 1.0.1
Portable Shutter Island 1.0.1
Release: 2010 | English | PC | Developer: Anino Games | 139Mb
Genres: Hidden Object
US Marshal Teddy Daniels has come to Shutter Island, home of Ashecliffe Hospital for the Criminally Insane. Along with his partner Chuck he sets out to find an escaped patient, a murderess name Rachel Solando, as a hurricane bears down upon them. But nothing at Ashecliffe Hospital is what it seems, and disappearing patients isn’t the only secret the island hides. The closer they get to the truth though, the more elusive it becomes, and the more they fear that someone doesn’t want them to leave Shutter Island alive!
Game features:
Based on a major motion picture
Creepy atmosphere
Discover the island's secrets!
System requirements:
Windows XP/Vista
1.2 GHz
1024 MB RAM
Screenshots:
Download
Hotfile.com For USA, EU, Japan, Sing, Au, Ru, UAE, SA.
http://hotfile.com/dl/39343175/a97b66f/PortableShutterIsland1.0.1.crazybaby.rar.html
Nextlimit Maxwell Render v2.0.3 32/64 bit + Plugins
Maxwell Render Next Limit Technologies Company is an independent system for visualizing (rendering) of three-dimensional objects, which is built on the principle of "no assumptions". That is, it is based on the physical properties of light and surfaces. Since the program uses the equation of the wave theory of light, it allows to visualize three-dimensional scenes with unprecedented quality.
The system is fully reproduces not only the wave properties of light that makes it easy to reproduce many physical phenomena, such as expansion of the light spectrum after passing through a prism. Sam visualizer expects this behavior of light, without forcing user to resort to various tricks and tactics.
In addition, using the model of a real physical object's surface, Maxwell Render calculates the interaction of light with this surface as it is happening. Therefore, in the most logical to use the units of the SI. Non-physical imaging system using a different approach and work with the surface and its characteristics otherwise. Otherwise - the different characteristics of the treated surface artificial, determined by a user and does not depend on its real properties. As a result, you can often see various artifacts, defects in the final image. An interesting feature of Maxwell Render is a rejection of the method of presentation of light in the form of quanta (photons). Go to work with the wave characteristics possible to describe the properties of the virtual light source as is done with the real sources. For example, the color is now set not a set of values of RGB, and long wave or the surface temperature of the glowing object. These two parameters are closely related to each other. The closest analogue were photometric lights in the 3ds Max.
The new version of Maxwell Render 2 carries a large number of new features, improvements and additions, including the following:
* Significant improvements in speed and reduction of "noise" by optimizing the caustics, emitters, mirrors, HDRI etc.
* Significant improve clarity, color, light distribution, etc.
* Stacked Layers: Materials can now "stack" on each other, similarly as with the layers in a photo editor.
* Thin SSS: subsurface scattering in V2 now has a special mode that can be applied to unilateral geometry. This mode is ideal for leaves, lampshades, paper, etc.
* Support files IES and EULUMDAT.
* Color Multilight: Added ability to edit the color of the light source in real time.
* Added compatibility with RealFlow.
* New plug-in for Modo.
* And much more.
Download:
http://hotfile.com/dl/39675302/6a25c38/NLMRv2.0.3.part1.rar.html
http://hotfile.com/dl/39675336/1e16b66/NLMRv2.0.3.part2.rar.html
http://hotfile.com/dl/39675376/fa58cf5/NLMRv2.0.3.part3.rar.html
http://hotfile.com/dl/39675394/5b2cec0/NLMRv2.0.3.part4.rar.html
http://hotfile.com/dl/39675336/1e16b66/NLMRv2.0.3.part2.rar.html
http://hotfile.com/dl/39675376/fa58cf5/NLMRv2.0.3.part3.rar.html
http://hotfile.com/dl/39675394/5b2cec0/NLMRv2.0.3.part4.rar.html
Biography of Adolf Hitler
Full Name: Mr. Adolf Hitler
Date of Birth: April 20, 1889
Place of Birth: Braunau am Inn, Austria
Died: April 30, 1945
Place of Death: Berlin, Germany
Classification: Leaders & Revolutionaries
Short Biography of Adolf Hitler
With a passion to be an artist and an architect, young Adolf Hitler spent many years in Vienna, after dropping out of school at age 16, where he sold paintings on postcards to locals and tourists alike. Without the support of his father in his pursuits, he quickly ran out of money and lived in a homeless shelter. Some evidence suggests that Hitler was exposed more than ever to anti-Semitism during his time there, as the city had a large Jewish community, which fostered his evolving ideology.
Hitler went to Munich, Germany in 1913 and was fascinated with the architecture and art of the place. But, as he fed his aesthetic hunger, he also joined the Bavarian Army in World War I, where he served in France and Belgium under Ludwig III. He received a badge for a wound he received from enemy fire.
Becoming a German patriot, but not a full-fledged citizen meant that Hitler couldn’t hold any real public office. He remained in the Army after World War I and moved up to the position of a police spy where he was to convince other small political groups on a scheme of propaganda and ‘national thinking’ that Jews in Germany had cost them the war.
Adolf Hitler had become an excellent orator in front of crowds. After hearing him speak, people feverishly followed and believed what he said. Hitler became the leader of the newly dubbed National Socialist German Workers Party and his speeches against communism, capitalism, and groups such as the Jews, won him national backing on every level.
In his autobiography called Mein Kampf, which he dictated while serving a short prison term, he talks about both his personal struggle growing up as a ‘misunderstood artist’ and how his political beliefs were formed. Hitler made millions from its publication and by World War II, it was required reading in Germany.
With the Great Depression taking place in the United States and elsewhere in the world, Germany too fell into economic hardships. Hitler was able to bridge the lower and middle classes together in hopes of bringing Germany back to its previous greatness. His party assigned him to a post so that he could receive German citizenship and he ran for president. Hitler was sworn in as the Chancellor and his Nazi Party had already gained control of many of the top governmental offices. Eventually, Hitler lifted himself to dictator with full-fledged support from many parties. He now had control of the military, to which no one else had power.
Hitler improved the infrastructure of Germany and the living standards of different classes. He also began his campaign to take over other European lands and to exterminate anyone he saw as a hindrance to his progress – namely the Jews. As Hitler attached Poland, no other country did much to stop him. By the time Hitler had attacked the Netherlands, France declared war, but were quickly defeated. Then, Hitler declared war on the United States by siding with Japan, and marked the beginning of World War II.
Between 1939 and 1945, until Hitler’s defeat, he and Heinrich Himmler had been involved in the killing of over eleven million people, including more than six million Jews. It has been called the ‘Holocaust’. The end of the war came when Russia, Britain, and the United States took Munich. When the liberating troops were within just a few hundred meters of Hitler’s bunker, he killed himself, along with his new wife Eva Braun and his dog named Blondi.
Date of Birth: April 20, 1889
Place of Birth: Braunau am Inn, Austria
Died: April 30, 1945
Place of Death: Berlin, Germany
Classification: Leaders & Revolutionaries
Short Biography of Adolf Hitler
With a passion to be an artist and an architect, young Adolf Hitler spent many years in Vienna, after dropping out of school at age 16, where he sold paintings on postcards to locals and tourists alike. Without the support of his father in his pursuits, he quickly ran out of money and lived in a homeless shelter. Some evidence suggests that Hitler was exposed more than ever to anti-Semitism during his time there, as the city had a large Jewish community, which fostered his evolving ideology.
Hitler went to Munich, Germany in 1913 and was fascinated with the architecture and art of the place. But, as he fed his aesthetic hunger, he also joined the Bavarian Army in World War I, where he served in France and Belgium under Ludwig III. He received a badge for a wound he received from enemy fire.
Becoming a German patriot, but not a full-fledged citizen meant that Hitler couldn’t hold any real public office. He remained in the Army after World War I and moved up to the position of a police spy where he was to convince other small political groups on a scheme of propaganda and ‘national thinking’ that Jews in Germany had cost them the war.
Adolf Hitler had become an excellent orator in front of crowds. After hearing him speak, people feverishly followed and believed what he said. Hitler became the leader of the newly dubbed National Socialist German Workers Party and his speeches against communism, capitalism, and groups such as the Jews, won him national backing on every level.
In his autobiography called Mein Kampf, which he dictated while serving a short prison term, he talks about both his personal struggle growing up as a ‘misunderstood artist’ and how his political beliefs were formed. Hitler made millions from its publication and by World War II, it was required reading in Germany.
With the Great Depression taking place in the United States and elsewhere in the world, Germany too fell into economic hardships. Hitler was able to bridge the lower and middle classes together in hopes of bringing Germany back to its previous greatness. His party assigned him to a post so that he could receive German citizenship and he ran for president. Hitler was sworn in as the Chancellor and his Nazi Party had already gained control of many of the top governmental offices. Eventually, Hitler lifted himself to dictator with full-fledged support from many parties. He now had control of the military, to which no one else had power.
Hitler improved the infrastructure of Germany and the living standards of different classes. He also began his campaign to take over other European lands and to exterminate anyone he saw as a hindrance to his progress – namely the Jews. As Hitler attached Poland, no other country did much to stop him. By the time Hitler had attacked the Netherlands, France declared war, but were quickly defeated. Then, Hitler declared war on the United States by siding with Japan, and marked the beginning of World War II.
Between 1939 and 1945, until Hitler’s defeat, he and Heinrich Himmler had been involved in the killing of over eleven million people, including more than six million Jews. It has been called the ‘Holocaust’. The end of the war came when Russia, Britain, and the United States took Munich. When the liberating troops were within just a few hundred meters of Hitler’s bunker, he killed himself, along with his new wife Eva Braun and his dog named Blondi.
Biography of Albert Einstein
Full Name: Mr. Albert Einstein
Date of Birth: March 14, 1879
Place of Birth: Ulm, Württemberg, Germany
Died: April 18, 1955
Place of Death: Princeton, New Jersey, USA
Classification: Scientists & Thinkers
Short Biography of Albert Einstein
Receiving a compass at the age of five from his father ignited the passion to learn about the invisible forces of nature in young Albert Einstein. As the compass pointed northward, he gasped in disbelief that something unseen should have such a profound affect. From that time on, his voracious appetite involving the physical world around him would control his destiny.
As a calm, collect and patient child, Einstein spent long hours reading books. He also attended a Catholic elementary school, even though his family was of Jewish descent. Further enhancing his intellectual upbringing, his uncles provided him with books on philosophy, math, and science. With a fortitude in science and math coupled with an open-minded upbringing in education, Einstein taught himself Euclidean Geometry and Calculus before the age of fourteen. At the age of 16, after quitting school he came up with one of his first theories of light and relativity – that the speed of light is separate from the observer – as he looked into a mirror, an experiment often dubbed “Albert Einstein’s Mirror”.
After finishing secondary school, Albert attended the Federal Polytechnic Institute and went on to teach there in 1900. After his teaching sting, Einstein went on to work for the Swiss Patent Office where he would examine other’s applications. He soon married Mileva Marić who, as it has been often debated, collaborated or was at least influential on Einstein’s publications.
Just five years later, Einstein obtained his doctorate from the University of Zurich with his theory about the molecular dimensions. In this same year, he published four groundbreaking papers. In these papers, he discusses the photoelectric effect (for which he would be awarded a Nobel Prize), relativity, and the movement of molecules. But, by 1911, Einstein was focusing more on his theories of relativity, which would only be measurable during a solar eclipse. Scientists and physicists all around the globe stood by to wait for the measurable outcome that would prove that light could bend in a gravitational field. Einstein’s theory proved correct, which would solidify his place as the world’s top physicists.
Albert Einstein received more honorary doctorate degrees than can be counted on both hands. For his work in science, mathematics, and philosophy, Einstein not only became a popular icon of the time, which included recognition of his famed E=MC2 theory, but gave him the freedom to work and lecture in the United States, where he became a citizen.
Albert Einstein rejected violent governments and renounced his own nationality on more than two occasions while living in Europe. During Germany’s rise to power, before World War II, Einstein and other scientists knew it was using Uranium in an attempt to make an atomic weapon. Although not directly involved in its manufacturing, Einstein’s theories of molecular movement and energy were used to create the first atomic weapon, dubbed the “Manhattan Project” for the United States.
While no one biography written about Einstein could cover all his contributions to science and humanity, the impact he had over mankind is undisputed. In the mid-1900s, Einstein was invited to become the second president of Israel, which he declined in order to remain in the United States to continue his studies. He did, however, help establish the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. And, even though he died in 1955, Albert Einstein was named Person of the Century by TIME Magazine in 1999.
Date of Birth: March 14, 1879
Place of Birth: Ulm, Württemberg, Germany
Died: April 18, 1955
Place of Death: Princeton, New Jersey, USA
Classification: Scientists & Thinkers
Short Biography of Albert Einstein
Receiving a compass at the age of five from his father ignited the passion to learn about the invisible forces of nature in young Albert Einstein. As the compass pointed northward, he gasped in disbelief that something unseen should have such a profound affect. From that time on, his voracious appetite involving the physical world around him would control his destiny.
As a calm, collect and patient child, Einstein spent long hours reading books. He also attended a Catholic elementary school, even though his family was of Jewish descent. Further enhancing his intellectual upbringing, his uncles provided him with books on philosophy, math, and science. With a fortitude in science and math coupled with an open-minded upbringing in education, Einstein taught himself Euclidean Geometry and Calculus before the age of fourteen. At the age of 16, after quitting school he came up with one of his first theories of light and relativity – that the speed of light is separate from the observer – as he looked into a mirror, an experiment often dubbed “Albert Einstein’s Mirror”.
After finishing secondary school, Albert attended the Federal Polytechnic Institute and went on to teach there in 1900. After his teaching sting, Einstein went on to work for the Swiss Patent Office where he would examine other’s applications. He soon married Mileva Marić who, as it has been often debated, collaborated or was at least influential on Einstein’s publications.
Just five years later, Einstein obtained his doctorate from the University of Zurich with his theory about the molecular dimensions. In this same year, he published four groundbreaking papers. In these papers, he discusses the photoelectric effect (for which he would be awarded a Nobel Prize), relativity, and the movement of molecules. But, by 1911, Einstein was focusing more on his theories of relativity, which would only be measurable during a solar eclipse. Scientists and physicists all around the globe stood by to wait for the measurable outcome that would prove that light could bend in a gravitational field. Einstein’s theory proved correct, which would solidify his place as the world’s top physicists.
Albert Einstein received more honorary doctorate degrees than can be counted on both hands. For his work in science, mathematics, and philosophy, Einstein not only became a popular icon of the time, which included recognition of his famed E=MC2 theory, but gave him the freedom to work and lecture in the United States, where he became a citizen.
Albert Einstein rejected violent governments and renounced his own nationality on more than two occasions while living in Europe. During Germany’s rise to power, before World War II, Einstein and other scientists knew it was using Uranium in an attempt to make an atomic weapon. Although not directly involved in its manufacturing, Einstein’s theories of molecular movement and energy were used to create the first atomic weapon, dubbed the “Manhattan Project” for the United States.
While no one biography written about Einstein could cover all his contributions to science and humanity, the impact he had over mankind is undisputed. In the mid-1900s, Einstein was invited to become the second president of Israel, which he declined in order to remain in the United States to continue his studies. He did, however, help establish the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. And, even though he died in 1955, Albert Einstein was named Person of the Century by TIME Magazine in 1999.
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