Archive for July, 2012
I Am Awesome – Facebook Cover
July 17th, 2012, posted in DAtEs iN a YeARMMS Setting For Ufone, Warid, Telenor
July 16th, 2012, posted in MOBiLE, PAKiSTAN***************************************************************
Ufone MMS Settings
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To be able to use Ufone MMS you need to have MMS enabled on your number and a compatible handset.
You can get MMS & GPRS settings for your handset by:
– Sending your phone’s model number in an SMS to 222, Example: P910i or 6600 or razr v3
– By Ufone Help Line or by visiting the nearest Customer Services Center.
MMS Charges:
The cost of sending a local MMS to any network or an email address is Rs. 5.00 + Tax per 64KB
Uth MMS is charged at Rs. 1 + Tax per 64KB
Incoming MMS is absolutely free.
How to Subscribe:
To subscribe to Daily MMS Package simply send SMS with keyword SUB to 665
| PACKAGES | SUBSCRIPTION | NO. OF FREE MMS | VALIDITY | SMS ‘SUB’ TO |
| Daily MMS Package | Rs. 3.99 + tax | 150 | 24 Hours | 665 |
For ufone details check this link :
http://www.ufone.com/mobpro_mobileinternet.aspx
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Telenor MMS Settings
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Send a text message to 131 with your handset make and model to receive your handset settings:
For Example:
For Internet
- Write “Internet” and SMS it to 131
For WAP
- Write “wap” and SMS it to 131.
For MMS
- Write “mms” and SMS it to 131.
For All handset setting
- Write “All” and SMS it to 131.
For more telenor mms details visit this website :
http://www.telenor.com.pk/telenor-handset-settings
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Warid MMS Settings
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MMS (Multimedia Messaging Service)
With MMS, messaging is fun, colorful and musical. Add pictures, animations, polyphonic & true tones, and even video clips to messages, and show the world how amazing communication can be.
How it works?
Please consult your mobile phone instruction manual to see exactly how this is done on your particular phone.
Next, you need to configure your handset with Warid MMS settings. Please follow these simple steps to get the MMS configuration:
Method 1
Go to: Warid>Messaging>Multimedia Settings>MMS
Enter handset make (e.g. nokia) & model number (e.g. 6020) when prompted.
- SMS is generated from your handset
- You will receive a message with the settings. Please select ‘yes’ to save the settingsNote: Before using MMS, please ensure to subscribe to the GPRS service and have your handset configured
Method 2
Type ‘SET MMS’ & Send to 1190
You will receive the MMS settings via a message.
Please select ‘yes’ to save the settings
Note: There are certain mobiles that do not support this setting process. Please contact our Customer Service Center for assistance.;
Mobile Internet
This powerful service offers you complete flexibility to view the internet on your cell phone or laptop. So whenever you are on the move and want to look for information on the internet, simply setup the internet connection from your GPRS/ WAP/EDGE enabled handset. You can also use your handset as a GPRS modem and connect it to your laptop wirelessly using Bluetooth, infrared or a cable.
How it works?
Consult your handset instructions manual to find out if your handset supports GPRS/ WAP/EDGE. Alternately call our Customer Care Center on 321 from your Warid phone or simply dial our UAN 111-111-321 from any other phone.Please also ensure, you have subscribed to GPRS before configuring these settings.
- Go to: Warid Menu>Messaging>Mutimedia Settings>WAP/GPRS
- Enter the handset make (e.g nokia) and model number( e.g 6020) when prompted.
- SMS will be generated from your handset
- You will receive a message with the settings. Please select ‘yes’ to save the settings in your handset
Note: Before using mobile internet, please subscribe to the GPRS service and have your handset configured.
For more detail for Warid MMS , visit this website :
http://www.waridtel.com/products/mobile_wizard/index.php
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Note : We am just providing you the detials … Please confirm it yourself as well… We are not responsible for anything..
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Difference Between Naked And Nude
July 16th, 2012, posted in Art, Ink On PAPERI happened to read an interesting blog where I found this paper and thought to copy this blog. That paper was Women in the Nude: A Study of Susanna and the Elders by Han Xinzhen Pema, which is a comparative analysis of two paintings based on the biblical story of Susanna and the Elders; one by Jacopo Tintoretto and the other by Artemisia Gentileschi.
- “One of the most popular themes was a story from the apocryphal Book of Susanna, Chapter 1, about Susanna and the Elders (1:1-1:64). Susanna was the beautiful wife of the prosperous Jew, Joacim. As Joacim was wealthy and honorable, many Jews came to him for counsel and two Elders who were elected as judges that year frequented Joacim’s house often. They began to lust after Susanna and conspired to seduce her together. Hiding in the garden where she bathed, they sprang on the unsuspecting Susanna and threatened to accuse her of committing adultery with another man if she did not submit to their advances. The virtuous Susanna  chose to die rather than dishonor her husband. Fortunately, she was saved by the prophet Daniel who uncovered the truth by interrogating the Elders separately. Susanna was proven innocent of adultery and the Elders were stoned to death for their crimes.”
- “The two paintings, despite having the same subject matter and being painted a mere fifty years apart, portray Susanna and the Elders in vastly different ways. While Artemisia’s version clearly shows Susanna’s fear and repulsion as a woman under the threat of rape, Tintoretto’s version of Susanna seems designed to display her feminine charms to the viewer. A viewer would feel inclined to empathize with Artemisia’s Susanna and her plight as a victim of sexual harassment. However, a viewer would be more inclined to view Tintoretto’s Susanna with an appreciation for the beauty of her feminine form while remaining emotionally detached from her plight. In this essay, I shall compare the two paintings and show how Tintoretto’s version objectifies Susanna for  the viewing pleasure of a male audience, while Artemisia’s feminist version is able to show the unfortunate plight of Susanna and move the viewer.”
- “Now, according to Berger “to be naked is to be oneself. To be nude is to be seen naked by others and yet not recognized for oneselfâ€. This differentiation of the naked and nude is derived from Berger’s interpretation of Kenneth Clark’s statement “that to be naked is to be without clothes, whereas the nude is a form of artâ€. Nakedness is essentially a state of undress whereas nudity involves the gaze, a “way of seeingâ€. A naked woman becomes a nude when she is the subject of a gaze. She is objectified in the process.
- In Tintoretto’s painting, the naked Susanna on her own is free to do as she likes and express herself however she wants to, but in the eyes of the Elders and viewer, she ceases to have any personal identity and is merely an object to be ogled at. Her nude body plainly acts as a magnet to attract the attention of the viewer. It has no other consequential purpose or worth. Her porcelain skin and immaculately done hair only serve to emphasize her perfection and show her objectification.
- In the case of Artemisia’s Susanna, Susanna may be naked but she is not a nude. Susanna’s hair is disheveled and messy and her washcloth is draped across her thigh as if it was dropped in a hurry. Her appearance is that of a woman who was surprised in the middle of her actions instead of a mannequin posing in an aesthetically beautiful way like Tintoretto’s Susanna. The awkward twisting of her body away from the Elders and the positioning of her arms to fend off the Elders make it obvious that instead of appearing like an object, she is in the midst of a situation which she is actively seeking to avoid.”







