Thursday, April 30, 2009

Network Update

Hot Summer Update — Coming Soon!

We are always busy ... trying to give our members more convinience and more option to express themselves through our platform. After quite a days of inactivity to our members, we thought it wight be a good way to give them a surprise that they deserve.

On this updated, we will roll-out spectacular features and navigation for the members that they have never ever experienced on a social network before.

We are putting together entertainment and mass-communication together.
Serampore Social Network - Hot Summer Update

So, if your summer holidays are on and it makes you feel bored. Then register to social network and show off your talent to the rest of the worl.
You can not just write blogs, forum-threads ... You can broadcast your songs and performances on our platform as well.
So, c'mon ... express yourself ...Open-mouthed


If you have suggestions, please add them as a thread under 'Network Suggestions' forum-topic.
If you would like to get in touch with us personally, kindly click on the 'Contact' page on the navigation-bar, below the header-image.

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Serampore - Interacting People and Different Cultures

This is a roof, under which people can have a better and healthy interaction.Our motto is to make people believe that the country-lines on the maps are just imaginary. Living in the ages of Net2.0, geographical distance is so not a bar if the desire to have a better interaction is high by sharing facts about one's culture and acknowledge others'.

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Tuesday, March 3, 2009

The Golden Goose— a Fairy Tale

The Golden Goose— a Fairy Tale
Once upon a time there lived a queen in the city of Benaras. Her name was Khema and she was the wife of King Bahuputtaka, which means 'father of many sons'. One night, the Queen had a dream of a beautiful golden goose that spoke with great wisdom, almost as if he was a sage. She told her husband that she desperately wanted to see a bird just like the one that she had seen in her dream. So the King asked his ministers to find out all that they could about a bird such as this. He was told that such a bird did exist but was extremely rare and difficult to find. They advised him to build a beautiful lake on the outskirts of Benaras so that he may attract such rare and lovely creatures to reside there. In this way the queen might have her wish.
Towards the north, on Mount Cittakuta, there lived about ninety thousand wild geese headed by a beautiful golden goose called King Dhatarattha. He got to hear of this exquisite lake that was surrounded by flowers and trees and had lovely water lilies and lotuses floating on the surface. The king had named this lake after his wife Khema and had invited all the birds to come and live on it, promising that none of them would ever be harmed. Corn was scattered on a daily basis in order to attract the birds.

Continue Reading ...

আমি

আমি
বাঁচার আভাস টুকু দেখতে পাই, দূরের নীলিমার মত,
স্বপ্নে দৌড়োই আমি

তীব্র আনন্দ বুকে
ফণী মনসার ঝোপ পেরিয়ে, অনায়াসে

বাতাসের কু ঝিক ঝিক
জানালার দুপাশে সরে যায়
সারি সারি মেঘের আড়ালে
কলতান আমি!

Monday, March 2, 2009

Mirror that Gives a True Reflection

Mirror that Gives a True Reflection


An inventor has designed the first mirror which gives a true reflection – and not a mirror image. Andrew Hicks' creation has several tiny curves and bends in different directions which flip a mirror image back the right way.

Text can be viewed from left to right and, if you raise a hand while looking in the mirror, your reflection appears to be raising the opposite.

Mr Hicks, a mathematician at Drexel University in Philadelphia, used computer algorithms to find the ­dimensions and angles need to make his invention work.

The 42-year-old has spent years creating different mirrors and has also made ones which eliminate distortion or give wide angle views.

The reflection we see in a conventional mirror is shifted from left to right, so text appears back to front.

Normal mirrors simply bounce light from an object back to the viewer.

The unique shape of Mr Hicks' design directs light from an object, across the mirror face and back to the viewer, which flips the mirror image.