This is a nice example of how creative kids can be. A school kid drew Gabbar singh's orkut profile in a drawing competition show ow addicted kids are with social networks like Orkut and Facebook
Wow thats a great deal of creativity .. I am wondering y people always get behind Sholay !! Everything under the sun is compared with Sholay !! A great Epic I guess !! What say ... Nice Post though...
This is a tutorial on how to create a contact form using JotForm. Getting Started with JotForm There is a free option and a paid option. Both have the same features, but the paid option allows more forms, more submissions, etc. Here's a comparison chart . Getting Started with JotForm Set up account (free or paid); Click New Form You can create a form from scratch ("Blank Form"), select a form template (for this tutorial I chose "Contact Us"), or import a form from another website or another form previously created on JotForm. After making your selection, click "Continue"... "Contact Us" Template Assuming, for the purposes of this tutorial, you chose "Contact Us," you'll see it has: Name (separate first and last name fields), Email, Message. Add Drop Down (aka Pulldown Select) To add your drop-down options, click the small icon to the right of the pulldown box Add Radio Button Enter the question, then click the
Facebook has introducted some really interesting Beta language settings the best ones are Facebook English (Pirate) and English (Upside down). The latest language to be added is Facebook English (Pirate) and it pimps your profile by turning everything into pirate speak! Facebook English (Pirate) changes almost everything on your profile - posting photos becomes 'hoisting portraits', being poked becomes 'Arrr! Ye have been skewered by' and you have 10 friend requests becomes '10 sorry louts think they're yer mates. In this all your text turns upside down except for status messages. I think Batman is still out there testing this one. How to go about it... Go to the language settings at the bottom of the page The pop up allows you to change the language settings - select either English (Pirate) or English (Upside down)
by Michael Arrington on April 3, 2009. Source: Techcrunch Facebook is testing a new virtual gifts product that allows users to give “credits” to other users. The idea is that you can give other users these credits in addition to or in lieu of commenting or liking a message or status. So if for example I say “out walking the dog,” other people can throw some credits my way. VentureBeat has an exclusive overview . Here’s why Facebook likes the product - you pay for the credits with cash, to the tune of $1 per 100 credits. That’s enough incentive for them to test this out, despite the fact that anyone who looks at it for more than a moment will realize it’s doomed to fail. There’s no real world parallel to this gift, like Facebook’s existing (and reportedly underperforming) virtual gifts product that lets you give someone an image of a cupcake or whatever on their birthday. My strong guess is very few people will use this, I can’t imagine someone saying “nice status update, here’s some
Comments