Tuesday, 17 July 2012
Saturday, 14 July 2012
Wednesday, 9 November 2011
Tuesday, 13 September 2011
Monday, 12 September 2011
Wednesday, 3 August 2011
Online QR (Quick Response) Code Creater, Reader and Application downloading
Online QR code creator for products: http://www.qrstuff.com/
Online Barcode reader site: http://www.onlinebarcodereader.com/
Best 5 Free Online QR Code Readers: http://freenuts.com/best-5-free-online-qr-code-readers/
QR code software: http://www.mobile-barcodes.com/qr-code-software/
What Is A QR Code And Why Do You Need One?
We all know that one of the keys to great SEO is making sure you keep your website updated, new and fresh. Whether you do this with a blog, or you change your homepage with new offers, coupons or new products, it serves to show Google that your site is “alive.” For many small businesses in particular, this is a real challenge.
So you already have great, fresh content on your site—what’s next? Do you know what is coming that may benefit your small business?
Have you heard of QR codes yet? Here is a quick introduction:
They come to us from Japan where they are very common. QR is short for Quick Response (they can be read quickly by a cell phone). They are used to take a piece of information from a transitory media and put it in to your cell phone. You may soon see QR Codes in a magazine advert, on a billboard, a web page or even on someone’s t-shirt. Once it is in your cell phone, it may give you details about that business (allowing users to search for nearby locations), or details about the person wearing the t-shirt, show you a URL which you can click to see a trailer for a movie, or it may give you a coupon which you can use in a local outlet.
The reason why they are more useful than a standard barcode is that they can store (and digitally present) much more data, including url links, geo coordinates, and text. The other key feature of QR Codes is that instead of requiring a chunky hand-held scanner to scan them, many modern cell phones can scan them. The full Wikipedia description is here.
A business card company showing how they are using them for businesses:
Add them to any print advertising, flyers, posters, invites, TV ads etc containing:
So you already have great, fresh content on your site—what’s next? Do you know what is coming that may benefit your small business?
Have you heard of QR codes yet? Here is a quick introduction:
What Are QR codes?
They look like this:They come to us from Japan where they are very common. QR is short for Quick Response (they can be read quickly by a cell phone). They are used to take a piece of information from a transitory media and put it in to your cell phone. You may soon see QR Codes in a magazine advert, on a billboard, a web page or even on someone’s t-shirt. Once it is in your cell phone, it may give you details about that business (allowing users to search for nearby locations), or details about the person wearing the t-shirt, show you a URL which you can click to see a trailer for a movie, or it may give you a coupon which you can use in a local outlet.
The reason why they are more useful than a standard barcode is that they can store (and digitally present) much more data, including url links, geo coordinates, and text. The other key feature of QR Codes is that instead of requiring a chunky hand-held scanner to scan them, many modern cell phones can scan them. The full Wikipedia description is here.
How does the cell phone read the code?
The cell phone needs a QR code reader, like this one from Kaywa. It takes literally 1 minute for someone with an iPhone or Android phone to find and install the reader.How do you generate a code?
You can easily generate a QR code using a site like Kaywa.com or you can use the Open Source code to generate codes for you if you have a smart developer on hand. Google also has a tool — see our separate article about that:Close-Up With Google’s New QR Code Generator.How can you use QR codes to benefit search marketing?
We are only just scratching the surface of how they will be used. We have added one to every business listing in our directory. Here are a few examples of how others are using them.A business card company showing how they are using them for businesses:
In print that links the user straight to a web site:
Skip to half way in this video to see some examples:
You can also watch this BBC Click interview on YouTube.How will Google see them?
If you add them to your website, the search engines will see that your pages have changed, and that you are updating pages. The search engine will see a new image and index it accordingly. At some point soon, the search engines will likely recognize QR codes and possibly index the content in them.Will your customers use them?
Today, few may use them, but those that do will certainly appreciate your tech knowledge, and those that don’t will certainly be inquisitive, which may open the door for conversation and a potential sale. Those that do use QR codes will definitely have a high tech know-how and may be more receptive to your presence on the web, your Twitter presence, Facebook, MySpace, YouTube etc.How could you use a QR code?
Your business, no matter how small or large, could use QR codes in a number of ways. You might auto generate one next to every product on your web site containing all the product details, the number to call and the URL link to the page so they can show their friends on their cell phone. You could add one to your business card containing your contact details so its easy for someone to add you to their contacts on their cell phone.Add them to any print advertising, flyers, posters, invites, TV ads etc containing:
- Product details
- Contact details
- Offer details
- Event details
- Competition details
- A coupon
- Twitter, Facebook, MySpace IDs
- A link to your YouTube video
Why barcodes or QR codes used?
Barcodes for inventory managment,
Bar coding for inventory and warehousing applications has been around for quite awhile. Viewed in the simplest manner, a warehouse must receive, inventory, and ship product efficiently. When mistakes are made in the warehouse, problems are often compounded before they are corrected. For example, if an item is incorrectly pulled from stock, not only would inventory be off, but the mistake of shipping the incorrect item would cause customer dissatisfaction, increased shipping and overhead costs, additional man-hours to "adjust" the problem, etc. Automatic ID has been a driving force in improving Inventory Control operations. Many affordable solutions now exist and can be implemented to improve productivity and reduce errors in what has historically been marketed only to Fortune 500 companies.
Whether a company is small or one of the Fortune 500, Inventory Control is not an option, it's a must. In today's competitive market, with smaller profit margins, inventory levels must accurately be maintained. Solutions exists starting from integrating a simple wedge decoder to more complex RF data collection systems. Most companies already have inventory applications currently installed. While some of these applications can be improved, the focus of this section is to provide a more efficient way of getting to and updating the host information.
To begin with, when the inventory is received, each product must be properly labeled. Most off-the-shelf programs can accommodate any kind of label. The label itself can practically be any material including paper, vinyl, polypropylene, or polyester. These are the most common facestocks available (for additional information, see the Ribbons and Labels section). Paper is the most common face stock and the least expensive. If the label must be smudge or smear resistant and/or hundreds or thousands of labels will be created daily, it is probably best to use a thermal transfer or direct thermal printer. Otherwise, a common office dot matrix or laser printer is sufficient to print labels.
The label must include a printed bar code. For most inventory applications Code 39 or Code 128 is adequate. The part number which is usually bar coded and a description of the part are often the minimum contents on the label. The time and date can also be added. Once the items are labeled, there are many solutions to maintain an accurate inventory.
If the warehouse is relatively small, the items for an order can be verified with a simple scanner and wedge decoder setup. The items must be physically brought to a terminal station. In a small warehouse, this is the least expensive approach to begin implementing bar codes for Inventory Control. Extenders can be added to some wedge decoders to have wireless scanning capability of up to 100 feet. If the warehouse is more than 30,000 sq. ft. Radio Frequency (RF) should be considered.
RF solutions provide real-time access to a central database in which the on-hand, committed, and on-order values are kept for each item. Radio Frequency Data Collection (RFDC) eliminates the inefficiency of an individual walking back-and-forth to a host terminal to query the database. As previously mentioned, there are now affordable RFDC systems that can be installed in practically any warehouse environment. With this configuration, the worker generally scans the item at the bin location for one of several reasons (1) to determine if it is the correct item, (2) to directly update the host database, (3) to locate additional inventory, and (4) to immediately update and flag any discrepancies for unexpected stock outages. RFDC is certainly a remarkable technology for inventory control.
If RFDC is cost prohibitive and/or real-time access to the host computer is not necessary, batch Portable Data Terminals (PDT) are an alternative.
Several clever methods can be employed with PDTs to simulate real-time access with a host computer by loading the database onto the portable reader. If this is coded in C or PASCAL, this will generally require several weeks of development time to get an initial program working. The key though is that simulated configurations are not real-time. The user must still manually upload the information at a workstation. With decreasing prices and today's technology, RFDC should be considered first if real-time access in necessary. Most PDTs have resident operating programs and can easily be programmed to record inventory. Applications can be written to prompt the user to input certain fields such as the item number and quantity. Additional fields can prompt for the warehouse number, aisle, bin, and shelf. When the operator has completed the set of tasks, the PDT is connected to a host terminal so that the inventory file can be uploaded. For most warehouse applications, an RF or Portable Data Terminal (PDT) is critical to accurately count and pull inventory. For additional information on which terminal to use, see the On-line vs. Off-line section under Radio Frequency Data Collection heading.
Whether a company is small or one of the Fortune 500, Inventory Control is not an option, it's a must. In today's competitive market, with smaller profit margins, inventory levels must accurately be maintained. Solutions exists starting from integrating a simple wedge decoder to more complex RF data collection systems. Most companies already have inventory applications currently installed. While some of these applications can be improved, the focus of this section is to provide a more efficient way of getting to and updating the host information.
To begin with, when the inventory is received, each product must be properly labeled. Most off-the-shelf programs can accommodate any kind of label. The label itself can practically be any material including paper, vinyl, polypropylene, or polyester. These are the most common facestocks available (for additional information, see the Ribbons and Labels section). Paper is the most common face stock and the least expensive. If the label must be smudge or smear resistant and/or hundreds or thousands of labels will be created daily, it is probably best to use a thermal transfer or direct thermal printer. Otherwise, a common office dot matrix or laser printer is sufficient to print labels.
The label must include a printed bar code. For most inventory applications Code 39 or Code 128 is adequate. The part number which is usually bar coded and a description of the part are often the minimum contents on the label. The time and date can also be added. Once the items are labeled, there are many solutions to maintain an accurate inventory.
If the warehouse is relatively small, the items for an order can be verified with a simple scanner and wedge decoder setup. The items must be physically brought to a terminal station. In a small warehouse, this is the least expensive approach to begin implementing bar codes for Inventory Control. Extenders can be added to some wedge decoders to have wireless scanning capability of up to 100 feet. If the warehouse is more than 30,000 sq. ft. Radio Frequency (RF) should be considered.
RF solutions provide real-time access to a central database in which the on-hand, committed, and on-order values are kept for each item. Radio Frequency Data Collection (RFDC) eliminates the inefficiency of an individual walking back-and-forth to a host terminal to query the database. As previously mentioned, there are now affordable RFDC systems that can be installed in practically any warehouse environment. With this configuration, the worker generally scans the item at the bin location for one of several reasons (1) to determine if it is the correct item, (2) to directly update the host database, (3) to locate additional inventory, and (4) to immediately update and flag any discrepancies for unexpected stock outages. RFDC is certainly a remarkable technology for inventory control.
If RFDC is cost prohibitive and/or real-time access to the host computer is not necessary, batch Portable Data Terminals (PDT) are an alternative.
Several clever methods can be employed with PDTs to simulate real-time access with a host computer by loading the database onto the portable reader. If this is coded in C or PASCAL, this will generally require several weeks of development time to get an initial program working. The key though is that simulated configurations are not real-time. The user must still manually upload the information at a workstation. With decreasing prices and today's technology, RFDC should be considered first if real-time access in necessary. Most PDTs have resident operating programs and can easily be programmed to record inventory. Applications can be written to prompt the user to input certain fields such as the item number and quantity. Additional fields can prompt for the warehouse number, aisle, bin, and shelf. When the operator has completed the set of tasks, the PDT is connected to a host terminal so that the inventory file can be uploaded. For most warehouse applications, an RF or Portable Data Terminal (PDT) is critical to accurately count and pull inventory. For additional information on which terminal to use, see the On-line vs. Off-line section under Radio Frequency Data Collection heading.
Wednesday, 22 June 2011
Monday, 6 June 2011
Butcher of Sarajevo on trial
"A very sad incident happened but unfortunately not even Muslim world or any community highlighted this incident as i should be........"
***_______________________________________________ ***Eric S. Margolis
6 June 2011
6 June 2011
Serb General Ratko Mladic is accused of killing at least five times more civilians than Osama bin Laden, yet for years no one seemed in any hurry to find the “Butcher of Sarajevo.” Mladic managed to hide in plain sight in Serbia for 16 years, no doubt with aid from the Serb Secret Police, military intelligence, and his old Yugoslav National Army buddies.
To many Serbs, he was a national hero. Having covered the Balkan Wars of the 1990’s, it always amazed me that the man who gloried in massacring Muslim women and children or blowing up mosques never had a price put on his head by any Muslim government. Where were all the so-called defenders of Islam when the Muslims of the Balkans were being murdered, starved, tortured and raped?
As I once said had the victims of Mladic and his Serb fascist allies Slobodan Milosevic and Radovan Karadzic been Jews, the Israeli Army would have rushed to their rescue and taken the murderers and tortures back in a cage.
The world did not want to know about the eruption of Nazi brutality in the Balkans. From 1989-1991, I wrote a series of newspaper articles warning that violent anti-Muslim hate-mongering and claims of Serb superiority being preached by demagogue Milosevic would eventually provoke war and genocide that would destroy Yugoslavia. Milosevic, backed by Serbia’s Orthodox Church, fascist paramilitary gangs and, ever so quietly, Greece, lit the fuse that blew apart Yugoslavia. The unnatural, unstable Yugoslav state created to benefit the Allied victors of World War I, blew apart, unleashing some of the most horrific cruelty seen in the 20thcentury.
Gen. Mladic’s mission was to head the so-called Bosnian Serb Army (an extension of the old Yugo Army), and create a Greater Serbia by murdering or expelling all Muslim Bosnians and Catholic Croats. This he did with medieval gusto, killing over 110,000 civilians and driving 250,000 from their homes. Barbarities were committed by all sides, but 90 per cent of them were by Serb forces that conducted mass killings, gang rapes of girls as young as 12, and ran concentration camps in which prisoners were starved, tortured, and raped. Their bodies were dissolved in acid, burned, buried, or thrown into mines and rivers.
Mladic and Karadzic laid siege to Bosnia’s capital, Sarajevo, killing over 10,000 civilians in a three-year assault. Then came the massacre at the supposed UN safe haven of Srebrenica. Cowardly Dutch UN troops assigned to protect Muslim refugees threw down their guns and ran away, to the undying shame of Holland.
Over three days, Mladic’s troops murdered at least 7,500-10,000 unarmed Bosnian Muslim men and boys. The full total will never be known as many bodies were skillfully concealed. This was the worst atrocity in Europe since Word War II.
But at the time, nothing was done about it. Britain’s then ruling Conservatives, led by John Major, Lord Hurd, and Malcom Rifkind were deeply anti-Muslim. They deftly blocked or sabotaged efforts by the US and other nations to rescue the terrorised Bosnians. France joined in the cynical faux peace talks while telling Serbia to hurry up and finish off Bosnia’s Muslims.
Britain and France both worried their large, downtrodden Muslim minorities might somehow become inflamed by creation of a tiny Muslim-majority state in Bosnia. Serbia was a traditional French ally and arms customers. Britain’s Tories worried that Germany might dominate a new Bosnian-Croat state. So they abetted murder most foul while preaching peace.
US forces could have captured Mladic but they were under orders not to risk the recent Dayton accords that ended the war by sanctifying ethnic cleansing.
Without US military intervention, the Balkan Wars and later ethnic cleansing in Kosova, would never have been stopped. US President Bill Clinton finally did the right thing and ordered NATO to end Serbia’s genocide. Europe was too cynical and divided to act.
Mladic has many stories to tell. Hopefully, we will now begin to hear some at his long overdue trial at The Hague.
Eric Margolis is a veteran US journalist
References:
Wednesday, 1 June 2011
Monday, 23 May 2011
An open letter to Gen. Kayani
Dear Sir,
Being a Pakistani, I have great confidence in you, and your force. I have tried to put “our” in here, but I have some stupid friends, and they wont let me do that, and rather insisted on calling it “your” force. My friends are stupid, but I can depend upon them, so can’t risk annoying them. I hope you understand my situation.
It was a great relief to know that the biggest terrorist on the face of earth has been dealt with, and that too on the Land of the Pure. I have always been a great fan of action movies, and I used to wonder if such things, as shown in the movies, do happen in real world? That a bunch of gunmen from an army can get into another country’s land, more than 200 kilometers in, without being noticed, completing their “mission“, without any hurdle, and then calling that country’s government after reaching their bases, only to inform they were there. I used to wonder. But I appreciate you and your force, for helping me overcome my amusement.
My stupid friends still think you knew about it, and because of some complications involved, are unable to acknowledge it, and I want to believe that, but my non-Pakistani friends, here in United Kingdom, expect a more reasonable explaination from me. For them, it was not that big a deal that Osama was hiding in Pakistan, what shocked them more was the news that US Army operated inside Pakistan. The problem is the difference in values in Pakistan and in the United Kingdom. Although not a noteworthy issue in Pakistan, over here people are frightened when a foriegn Army operates in their country. So they are still unable to digest this.
Sir, I know your secret service, ISI, is one of the best in the world. I cant believe them to be unaware of any such operation coming, but they, themselves, are contradicting me, by staying silent. When my friend called me to break this news to me, I was not very hopeful of the civilian leadership, but I thought, never mind, we have General Kayani, and he would be really furios about all this, and he will assume a strong position on this. Yes right, I was not expecting you to retaliate or anything, we already dont expect that, but at the least a strong stance, few harsh words, something to qoute for when my non-Pakistani friends ask me ‘what do you have to say about this?’.
But you, my last hope, disappointed me. I have nothing to say. Its not that I have stopped going to office, or meeting my friends, its just that I sometime feel the absence of a thing called “self-respect”. Yes, you are right, thats not the end of life, one doesn’t need self-respect to breath. Its all about Oxygen, I’m sure you’ll advise. But, somehow, probably because its his death aniversary today, I can’t get rid of Tipu Sultan’s words:
“One days’s life of a lion is preferable to hundred years’ existence of a jackal.”
He probably didn’t know it was all about Oxygen. Science hadn’t been that advanced as yet.
Poor Tipu!
-
Yours faithfully,
A humiliated Pakistani.
Wednesday, 18 May 2011
Tuesday, 10 May 2011
Qomiyat o Sobaiyt
Muslim's unity effected by elements like, Nationalism, Provence-ism, Cast and Lingual differences
<<< Click Here To Read >>>
Propaganda Against Madaris
Read how enemies of Islam are busy in building Propaganda Against Madaris
<<<<< Click to read >>>>>>
Monday, 9 May 2011
Thursday, 5 May 2011
Wednesday, 4 May 2011
Javed Ahmed Ghamidi's False Believes & Teaching
The link contain a book about false believes and teachings of Mr.Javed Ahamad Ghamdi,
http://www.nazmay.com/wordpress/islamicbooks/urdu/mufti-abdul-wahid/javed-ahmed-ghamidi.pdf
http://www.nazmay.com/wordpress/islamicbooks/urdu/mufti-abdul-wahid/javed-ahmed-ghamidi.pdf
Tuesday, 3 May 2011
Comments On Osama Bin Laden Death
Hi,
I will say, it was better if Americans would have hired a film director and story writer and have good drama (not Hollywood even Lollywood writer & director can plot it in a bit better way)
I will say, it was better if Americans would have hired a film director and story writer and have good drama (not Hollywood even Lollywood writer & director can plot it in a bit better way)
If Pakistanis were unaware then who told people belong to surrounding area to turn house lights off at 11 PM
Is Usama a kid to live in an area where PMA very near, a army check post few yards away
Is Usama mad that he selected a small city for shelter where there is AMC Center, FF Center, Bloach Center, PMA, Army Survey School, ISI office, Air-force Supply Center, AT unit, ........ and above all he selected house beside PMA Road
Whole operation for Saddam Hussain was broadcasted, but for Usama not even a single photograph published
Finally his dead-body disappeared, drowned in a river ( what an ironical)
An helicopter shot down by Usama guards but did not managed to kill even a single marine out of 35
.
.
.
(suppose it is true then its half truth)Krishan Lal say Ghazi Ahmad Tak
Story of a converted Muslim from Hindu,as it was not easy to do so because he has to bear with so many difficulties, atrocities and cruel behavior from his family and Hindu community but finally got wealth of Islam, continued his studies both religions and worldly education, now he is known as a Aalim and professor by profession.
His Story in his own way,
Tuesday, 19 April 2011
Heart provoking tail of a Sikh, Converted to Muslim[Mufti Abdul Wahid] & became A'alim
Assalamuallikum,
Tail of a converted Muslim from 'Sikhism' and then became an Aalim, he himself says, ...
[click below lilnk and listen]
http://www.darsequran.com/scholarsbayaan/mufti-AbdulWahid.php
Jazakallah
Tail of a converted Muslim from 'Sikhism' and then became an Aalim, he himself says, ...
[click below lilnk and listen]
http://www.darsequran.com/scholarsbayaan/mufti-AbdulWahid.php
Jazakallah
Friday, 15 April 2011
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