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Saturday, 10 February 2018

GSLDC Recruitment For various Post


Today is Last date For Apply in GUJARAT STATE LAND DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION


Last date 10 feb GSLDC Recruitment 2018
Gujarat State Land Development Corporation Limited (GSLDC) invites application for the various post
GSLDC Job Details:
No. of Posts: 71
Name of Posts
·         Company Secretary: 01 Post
·         Assistant Director: 03 Posts
·         Finance & Accounting Officer: 01 Post
·         Land conservation Officer: 02 Posts
·         Field Supervisor: 07 Posts
·         Field Assistant: 37 Posts
·         Senior Clerk: 02 Posts
·         Stenographer: 01 Post
·         Junior Clark cum Computer Operator: 17 Posts

Eligibility Criteria for GSLDC Recruitment:
·        Educational Qualification: Minimum 12th pass
·        Job Location : Gandhinagar (Gujarat)

·        GSLDC Selection Process: Selection will be based on Written test.


Apply Online: click here

          
           Official Notification: click here


  


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Wednesday, 7 February 2018

High court DySo Result

List of Candidates who have obtained Minimum 50 or More Marks (for General & SC Categories) and 45 or more Marks [for Reserved Categories i.e. SEBC/ST/Differently Abled Person (PH)] in the Elimination Test (Objective Type MCQs), held on 03/12/2017, for Recruitment to the post of Deputy Section Officer, on the establishment of the High Court of Gujarat.

view result click here
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Tuesday, 6 February 2018

Didn't Go Inside Pakistan Dressing Room: Rahul Dravid Clear Reporter

Rahul Dravid said the most satisfying part of the World Cup triumph was the process the team followed to reach the top.

India U-19 coach Rahul dravid and captain Prithvi Shaw on Monday addressed the media in Mumbai after they arrived from New Zealand. The former India captain answered questions ranging from the team's preparation for the tournament to the road ahead for the boys. Responding to a question about his visit to the Pakistan dressing room after India's semi-final win, Dravid corrected a reporter, who had perhaps based his question on the comments of Nadeem Khan, Pakistan U-19 team manager. “It was a very nice gesture only confirming Dravid’s stature in our eyes,” Nadeem Khan had said about Dravid visiting the Pakistan dressing room to boost the morale of the team after the crushing loss. However, Dravid clarified on the episode, saying he did not visit the Pakistan dressing room.

"I didn't go inside their dressing room. I just congratulated one of their left-arm pacers who had done well at the tournament. I met him outside their dressing to tell him that he had bowled well. I didn't go inside," Dravid said.

The 45-year-old said his gesture was in response to his counterpart, who had heaped a lot of praise on the Indian boys.

"The Pakistan coach told me that our boys had set the benchmark at the tournament," Dravid said.

"The real satisfaction, in my opinion, is the process that was followed over the last 14-16 months, the whole planning and preparation that has gone into, not necessarily for this World Cup, but for developing the U-19 players," he said.

"It was great team work, guys behind the scenes, the selectors, NCA, the BCCI setting up games and series. Winning a tournament like this is a good reflection of the team work," he added.

India won all their matches convincingly leading up to the final where they beat Australia by eight wickets.

Dravid though felt the team was not at its best in the summit clash.

"We did not play our number one game in the final, that we played in the quarter-final (versus Bangladesh) and semi-final (against Pakistan). Just the fact that they played the final was an experience," Dravid said.

Dravid signed off by advising the boys to quit age-level cricket and take the next step.

"My view is quite well known. I feel that once the boys are good enough they should go on to play men's cricket, especially those who had played first class cricket," he said.

"Five boys from last year's World Cup qualified to play this time. But we made a conscious decision not to pick them as I felt it will be better for them to play U-23 cricket and senior men's cricket.

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Friday, 2 February 2018

Power Of India...!


















Important Missiles of India
Here are some facts related to Indian Missiles that you must know. Run through the points mentioned below to acknowledge the power of India.

·       Defense Research and Development Organization (DRDO) is the organization responsible for the military’s research and development.
·       Former President Dr. APJ Abdul Kalam is also known as the "Missile Man of India"
·       India is the first nuclear weapons country to have a no first use policy.
·       Prithvi was the first missile to be built by India.
·       BrahMos, the world's fastest cruise missile is developed jointly by India & Russia and named after two rivers, the Brahmaputra of India and the Moskva of Russia.
·       Agni-V is India's longest-range missile to carry a nuclear warhead.

·       "K" missiles are faster, lighter and stealthier and named after Dr. APJ Abdul Kalam.


Astra
Air to Air Missiles Radar homing beyond-visual-range
60 to 80 Km
K-100
Air to Air Missiles Medium Range
300 to 400 Km
Nag
Anti Tank Missile
4 Km
Helina (Helicopter Launched Nag)
Anti Tank Missile
7 to 8 Km
Ashwin Ballistic Missile Interceptor or Advanced Air Defense (AAD)
Anti-Tank Miss
150+ Km
Nirbhay
Subsonic Cruise Missile
1,000 to 1,500 K
BrahMos
Cruise Missile
Fastest Cruise Missile in the World Supersonic cruise Missile
290 Km
BrahMos II
Cruise Missile Hypersonic cruise Missile
300 Km
Prithvi Air Defense (PAD)
Defense Missile
Exo-atmospheric Anti-ballistic missile
80 Km Altitude
Advanced Air Defence
Defense Missile
Endo-atmospheric Anti-ballistic missile
30 Km Altitude
Prithvi Defense Vehicle (PDV)
Defense Missile
Exo –atmospheric
Anti-ballistic missile
120 Altitude
Akash
Surface to Air Missile
Medium range surface to air Missile.
30 to 35 Km
Barak 8
Surface to Air Missile Long range surface to air Missile.
100 Km
Trishul
Surface to Air Missile Low level surface to air Missile.
0.5 Km to 9 Km
Pradyumna Ballistic Missile Interceptor or Prithivi Air Defense (PAD)
Surface to Air Missile
300 to 2,000 Km
Agni I
Surface to Surface Air Missile
Medium Range Ballistic Missile
700 to 1250 Km
Agni II
Surface to Surface Air Missile
Intermediate-range ballistic missile (IRBM)
2,000 to 3,000 Km
Agni III
Surface to Surface Air Missile
Intermediate-range    ballistic missile (IRBM)
3,500 to 5,000 Km
Agni IV
Surface to Surface Air Missile
Intermediate-range ballistic missile (IRBM)
3,000 to 4,000 Km
Agni V
Surface to Surface Air Missile
 Intercontinental ballistic missile
5,000 to 8,000 Km
Agni VI
Surface to Surface Air Missile
Four-stage intercontinental ballistic missile
8,000 to 12,000 Km
Prithvi I
Surface to Surface Air Missile
Short Range Ballistic Missile (Tactical)
150 Km
Prithvi II
Surface to Surface Air Missile
Short Range Ballistic Missile (Tactical)
350 to 600 Km
Dhanush
Surface to Surface Air Missile
Short Range Ballistic Missile (Tactical)
350 – 600 km
Prahaar (Pragati)
Surface to Surface Air Missile
Short Range Ballistic Missile (Tactical)
150 km
Shaurya
Surface to Surface Air Missile
Medium-Range Ballistic Missile (MRBM)
750 to 1900Km
Sagarika (K15)
Submarine Launched Ballistic Missile
700 to 1900Km
K4
Submarine Launched Ballistic Missile
3,500 to 5,000 Km
K5
Submarine Launched Ballistic Missile
6,000 Km





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Sunday, 28 January 2018

Padmaavat: With Bhansali's final saga of tragic romance, a look at Indian cinema's tryst with trilogies

Filmmaker Karan Johar’s recent announcement of producing Brahmastra with a stellar cast comprising Amitabh Bachchan, Ranbir Kapoor and Alia Bhatt, was reported by every publication. The fantasy-adventure film hit the headlines because of the sheer scale involved and a dream cast. But what skipped people’s attention was the fact that the announcement also mentioned the making of a trilogy, meaning that two more films will follow Brahmastra, with a common thread linking all the three outings.
The current week also marks the completion of a trilogy of an auteur filmmaker. With the release of Padmaavat, Sanjay Leela also completes his journey that he once started with Goliyon Ki Raasleela Ram-Leela. The common binding factor of unrequited love which was witnessed in Ram-Leela could also be seen in Padmaavat, though love itself has metamorphosed into desire and lust in his current outing.


Bhansali, in the company of Ranveer Singh and Deepika Padukone, has successfully traversed the journey of bringing alive the saga of yearning and unfulfilled love in his last three films. Ram-Leela was a modern day adaptation of the doomed love story of Romeo and Juliet, set amidst the colorful ambience of Gujarat. On the other hand, in Bajirao Mastani, although Deepika's character found it hard to gain social acceptance, the yearning to be with the man was so strong, that she had no qualms being Bajirao’s keep. Padmaavat has the same core idea with a slight deviation. In the film, the passion of Alauddin Khilji is driven more by lust than love which till the end remains unconquered.

Roughly defined, a trilogy refers to any three pieces of art that are loosely connected to each other and have a running theme. Trilogy is a very common format, often adopted by western filmmakers but despite the long history of Hindi cinema the cases here are few and far between.


While filmmakers like Sergio Leone, George Lucas and Steven Spielberg often resorted to this format to tell their stories, there were also narratives of Dr Hannibal Lecter and celluloid versions based on books of Stieg Larsson which came in pack of three. Such instances in Bollywood can be counted on the fingertips. Although the films in question here are strictly related to Bollywood, it becomes imperative to mention Satyajit Ray, who started it all. It was in 1959 when India got its first taste of a trilogy when Satyajit Ray took the onus. Pather Panchali, Aparajito and Apur Sansar remain the best known trilogy that Indian cinema has ever seen. While Pather Panchali dealt with Apu’s childhood in a poor family, Aparajito dealt with Apu’s adolescent years and his quest of becoming a brilliant student. The final film in the trilogy, Apur Sansar talked about Apu’s struggle of becoming a writer and the hardships he encounters after his marriage.

It was only in the '70s that Bollywood got its own trilogy and that too by none other than Hrishikesh Mukherji. The common factor that binds Golmaal, Naram Garam and Rang Birangi is humour through the eyes of a common man. The recurrent format he adopted for his films was more on the tragic-comic side with a dash of comedy of errors thrown in the plot. Both Golmaal and Naram Garam had their essence rooted in the struggle of a common man trying to save his job. His final film of the trilogy, Rang Birangi,was a slight deviation as it showed the character of Amol Palekar as a grown up, wealthy man who has now sort of taken over the place that Utpal Dutt occupied in the initial films. While Rang Birangi was slightly different from Hrishi Da’s earlier two films, the goof up element and the joint might of Amol Palekar and Utpal Dutt, more than made up for the lost components and merited as the final part of the trilogy.

The second trilogy that Hindi speaking cinegoers witnessed came after a really long gap, helmed by Mani Ratnam. Mani Ratnam began his journey with Roja and ended with Dil Se with Bombay in the interim. All his three films were love stories against the backdrop of terrorism. To sketch the love story idea further, all three were planted in The Taming of the Shrew concept. Roja talked about terrorism in Kashmir and at its core had a story of a couple trying to reunite against every curveball thrown at them. Bombay focused on the futility of riots with the protagonists of the love story being a couple with different religious beliefs. The film showed their trials and tribulations after the riots that ensued in the wake of the Babri Masjid demolition. Dil Se was Ratnam’s final work and this time opted for insurgency in the eastern part of India as the film’s backdrop. Shah Rukh Khan’s yearning for love, spread over a time period, towards Manisha Koirala, a suicide bomber, was the premise of Dil Se.

The last trilogy which was attempted in a very commercial set up, before SLB initiated his, was the Shakespearean drama trilogy by Vishal Bhardwaj. Vishal took the onus of interpreting Shakespeare’s work in his own fashion. He began with Macbeth and reinterpreted it as Maqbool which was seeped in the underbelly of the Mumbai mafia. Omkara was an interpretation of Othello and this time he took the story to the hinterland of Uttar Pradesh and gave viewers a close peep into the lives of henchmen of local politician plagued with caste and other social issues. Vishal’s final film in his trilogy was Haider, whose plot was inspired from Hamlet. Haider’s plot was set amidst an insurgency-ridden Kashmir and packed a powerful punch with its stark portrayal of a family drama overlapping with the politics of the region.

Bollywood did indulge in few more trilogies with the series like Dhoom, Masti and Race, but apart from minting big money, none could leave an impression. Deepa Mehta too attempted a trilogy based on the elements of earth. The common theme that linked fire, earth and water were social issues in its various forms but the filmmaker at best remains a Canadian filmmaker. Sanjay Leela Bhansali and Karan Johar should be applauded for reviving a format that for Bollywood has become synonymous with sequels. One can only hope that Hindi-speaking audiences in future are not bereft of such a pleasing genre.
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