Monday, December 12, 2011

3,000-year-old human remains uncovered in Mustang caves


The news extracted from ekantipur.com on 12 December, 2011 written by Ankit Adhikari




What could well be compared toShangri-La as envisioned by British author James Hilton in his 1933 novel Lost Horizon, recent findings of human history dating back to over 3,000 years inthe caves of Upper Mustang have unraveled a significant portion, if not thewhole of that virgin unknown.

A team of national and international climbers, scientists, archaeologists, historiansand anthropologists has found evidence of thousands of years of civilization in this mystical land. After beginning the first phase of its research in 2008,the team discovered human remains dating back to 3,000 years, bringing out untold stories of an “independent” civilization. According to Mohan Singh Lama,an archaeologist with the Department of Archaeology (DoA), the findings go backto the pre-history period (before the beginning of the Christian era) when the Indus Valley and the Chinese civilizations were slowly making inroads intoNepal via present day India and the Tibetan plateau. “Since cave settlement was not popular in other places around, we can view this as an independent civilization,”he said, adding that one of the most important cultures of the past that they found out is the unique burial pattern. According to him, dead bodies used tobe buried in caves, along with jewelry and utensils. The team found square coffins in the caves with human skeletons, perched under kilos of jewelry and utensils. “This makes the entire area rich in underground treasure, but many ofthe graves were dug by treasure hunters,” Lama said. Though not practiced now,treasure hunting used to be one of the most sensational businesses for many people in and around Mustang until a couple of centuries ago, experts say.

The team that includes experts from the National Geographic channel and the DoA hasso far been able to explore at least nine caves.

Ancient Tibetan Buddhist shrines were also recovered from the caves. The shrines aredecorated with exquisitely painted frescoes, including a 55-panel depiction of Buddha’s life. Thousands of pages of religious texts written in the Tibetan language,stone carvings, idols and paintings are the main religious findings, Lama said.Caves where people lived were constructed several meters vertically upward from the basement. “The caves that begin with a small hole visible from the outside are huge maze-like structures in the inside,” Lama said. However, how the people climbed up to the entrance is still a mystery” Lama added.

After 2008, the team continued its study in 2010 and 2011.

Mark Aldenderfer, an archaeologist at the University of California who is leadingthe excavation team, claims people have been living in the Mustang valley since10,000 years. “Our team found stone tools near Kagbeni. These tools resemblethose from lower elevations. Their presence suggests people have been moving intothe valley for a very long time,” Aldenderfer told the Post.

Sunday, December 11, 2011

एउटा अर्को राजेश हमालको जोकस।।


फेरि एकचोटि राजेश हमाल केटी माग्न गएछन् । केटीसँग कुरा मिलेपछी केटीले finalize गर्न भनेर ममिलाई बोलाई । ममिले राजेशलाई देख्ने बित्तिकै faint भैछन् ।

होश खुलेपछि hospital म उनलाईfaint हुनुको कारण सोधियो ।

ममिले भनिन् , ” यिनी त मलाई पनि हेर्न आएका थिए ।”



Saturday, December 10, 2011

How popular websites looked when they launched

Let’s go into past for a while. Let’s see how our current popular websites looked when they were launched mostly during mid and late 90s. Remember the days when the word Google was not interchangeable with Internet? Or when every site seemed to have a Netscape icon on it? Or when Flash was still something you cleaned your floor with?

Thanks to the way back machine Internet archive, we're still able to see some of the Web 1.0 and Web 2.0 pioneers looked in their earliest incarnations.

Let’s have a look of screenshots of top websites currently in the mid to late 1990s:


google.com - launched in 1996



facebook.com - launched in 2004




myspace.com - launched in 2003


yahoo.com - launched in 1994



youtube.com - launched in 2005




wikipedia.org - launched in 2001




msn.com - launched in 1995



apple.com - launched in 1987 (screenshot from1996)




drudgereport.com - launched in 1997




amazon.com - launched in 1995




twitter.com - launched in 2006




whitehouse.gov - launched in 1994


craigslist.org - launched in 1995

nytimes.com - launched in 1995

news.bbc.co.uk - launched in 1997



dell.com - launched in 1996



friendsreunited.com - launched in 2000



telegraph.co.uk - launched in 1994




blogger.com - launched in 1999






Forget New Twitter. Check Out Old Facebook

By Scott Gilbertson




The tech press is abuzz,debating the merits and failures of the new (new new?) Twitter web and mobile designs.

If you’re like most, you aren’t even seeing Twitter’s new website just yet, so if you’d like to contemplate  something a bit more fun on a Friday morning, consider what Twitter might have looked like had it been around in 1997.

You might remember 1997, the head yearly days of web design — 1-pixel spacer images, animated gifs, tables with gray borders and a magical new idea called “cascading stylesheets.”

How would Twitter have looked in that world? We’ll never know,but thanks to a new art project dubbed “Once Upon” you can see what Facebook,YouTube and Google+ might have looked like had they been around in 1997. Once Upon was created by artists Olia Lialina and Dragan Espenschied, who describe the project as “three important contemporary web sites recreated with the technology and spirit of late 1997, according to our memories.”

That’s right, Facebook, YouTube and Google+ redesigned in the spirit and look of 1997. As an added bonus the demo site has been set up to limit bandwidth at a 1997-esque 8 kB/s so it loads just as painfully slow as it would have on dial up.

Naturally all three sites are“best viewed with Netscape Navigator 4.03 and a screen resolution of 1024×768pixels, running under Windows 95″ (that resolution actually seems a bit large for 1997, but that’s okay). If you can’t find a Windows 95 machine in the closet fear not, the demo site will work in any web browser that supports frames.

Thursday, December 8, 2011

एक्छिन रमाइलो गरौ।।


मोबाइल म्यारिज ब्युरो

विदुर : “मैले ‘मोबाइल म्यारिज ब्युरो’ खोलेको छु । ०००० डायल गरी अविवाहित युवकले १, युवतीले २ र अभिभावकले ३ थिच्नुहोला ।” प्रश्न आयो : “दोश्रो विवाह गर्न चाहने चाँही के थिच्नु नि ?” विदुर : “दोश्रो विवाह गर्न चाहनेले पहिलोको घाँटी थिच्नु ।”


भेटे देखी बहुतै कम खान थालेको छु

प्रेमी: तिमीसंग भेटे देखी बहुतै कम खान थालेको छु । रक्सी खान छाडें, धुम्रपान गर्दिन …
प्रेमिका: हामी बीचको प्रेमले सबै कुरो बिर्साइदियो ?
प्रेमी: प्रेमले होइन, मायालु । पैंसाको अभावले ।

Wednesday, December 7, 2011

10 more words for GRE....

Here are 10 words for those who are preparing for GRE,
  1. Bard n.  poet
    • The ancient bard Homer sang of the fall of troy.
  2. Blunder n, v. error
    • The criminal's fatal blunder led to his capture.
  3. Canto n. division of long poem
    • Dante's poetic masterpiece "The Divine Comedy" is divided into cantos.
  4. Champion v, n. support militantly
    • Martin Luther King Jr,  won the Nobel Peace Prize because he championed the oppressed in their struggle for equality.
  5. collaborate v. work together
    •  Two writers collaborated  in preparing this book.
  6. conglomeration n. mass of material sticking together
    • In such a conglomeration  of miscellaneous statistics, it was impossible to find the single areas of analysis.
  7. counterpart n.  a thing that completes another; things very much alike
    • Day and night are counterparts.
  8. deciduous adj. falling off, as of leaves.
    • The oak is a deciduous tree.
  9. derogatory adj. expressing a low opinion
    • Because the word Eskimo has come under strong attack in recent years for its supposedly derogatory connotations, many Americans today either avoid the term or feel uneasy using it.
  10. dishearten v. discourage
    • His failure to pass the bar exam disheartened him.

Tuesday, December 6, 2011

For increasing GRE word power....5 Words for today...

For all who are preparing for GRE, here are 5 words for today,


  1. aboriginal:  adj, n. being the first of its kind in a region; primitive; native (aborigine, n)
    • Her studies of the primitive art forms of the aboriginal  Indians were widely reported in the scientific journals.
  2.  adulation n. flattery; admiration. (adulate, v)
    • The rock star thrived on the adulation of his groupies and yes -men. 
  3. amenities n. convenient features; courtesies.
    • In addition to the customary amenities for the business traveler- fax machines, modems, a health club- the hotel offers the services of a butler(head of the servant) versed in the social amenities.
  4. apothegm n. pithy, compact saying. (pithy-precisely meaningful, forceful and brief)
    • Proverbs are apothegms that have become familiar sayings.
  5. astral adj. relating to the stars.
    • She was amazed at the number of astral bodies the new telescope revealed.