
TECH GURU, TECH-SCIENCE NEWS
"I celebrate myself, and sing myself,
and what I assume you shall assume,
for every atom belonging to me as good belongs to you."
Wednesday, December 17, 2014
Oppo R5 in Bangladesh

Wednesday, August 27, 2014
Thursday, August 21, 2014
মাইক্রোসফটের ফোনে অপেরার ডিফল্ট ব্রাউজার

Thursday, August 7, 2014
Mushfiqur Rahim going to marriage
Wednesday, July 2, 2014
www.techandteen.com starts

Friday, May 30, 2014
WHAT REPORTERS DON'T WANT TO HEAR ...And 5 things they do
Being interviewed for newspaper, magazine or Internet articles is a great way for business owners to get the word out about their companies, assuming they say the right things during those one-on-one chats, of course.
How can you ensure you do just that the next time a reporter rings you up for a quote or two? Follow the advice.
What Reporters Don’t Want
1. Self-promotion
Specifically, As a small business owners avoid falling into the "my company or product is amazing because..." trap. "Reporters don't want to hear about how great your business is," . Rather, they want to hear "how you can help their readers with your ideas and experiences."
2. Apathetic or neutral positioning
If you're not going to "take a stand" while talking with a reporter, you may as well not talk with them at all. After all, there's no reason to quote you if you aren’t going to express an opinion on the topic at hand. "Be on one side or the other; the more opinionated you are, the more likely you'll be featured" in the finished product.
3. Verbose replies
Stay against responding to a journalist’s questions with overly lengthy answers. The reason: "It's challenging to edit comments into a sentence or two after a long-winded conversation."
4. "No comment"
Think long and hard before doling out this dreaded quote—especially, because "you might be the best source for the story, but you're making it impossible to tell it."
5. "Can I read your article before it's printed?"
Don't beginning or ending an interview with this question because media outlets "don't have the time to do that, especially nowadays"—what with their smaller staffs and tighter deadlines
What Reporters Do Want
1. Short sound bites
To make sure the sound bites you’ll share during your interview are top-notch "a short list of sound bites—just a sentence or two that sums up the story" before you get on the phone or meet with a reporter. Also, "practice [them] to see how they sound."
2. Numbers and statistics
Although small business owners tend to shy away from providing data, numbers or other such information "is often critical to a media piece,". Although, adding that "if you can work in a stat or two to support [your] position, do it. You shouldn’t "be overly promotional."
3. "Do you need any other sources?"
If the writer says yes, providing a few (assuming you know of any, of course). This "shows you’re willing to help the reporter, not just yourself, which builds credibility."
This also builds credibility with journalists, who often are on deadline. In addition, it increases the likelihood that you’ll be approached for quotes and commentary in the future.
5. Thank you
"Always write a follow-up email to let the media contact know you appreciate the interview opportunity. In that e-mail, "include a brief recap of your comments and request, if possible, that a link to your site be included." And should the resulting article appear online, "comment as soon as it goes live with thanks to the reporter.
Thursday, May 29, 2014
Big Data Growing rapidly

Friday, May 2, 2014
How To learn Code? Morten Lund Advise
Skype founder advises BD freelancers.HomeScience & TechNews
Skype founder advises BD freelancers,Internet has been providing amazing things for last 10 years. We need Vision and Focus to be an entrepreneur and successful coder.
Investor and entrepreneur Morten Lund delivers his advice to Bangladeshi students and freelancers through Skype from Denmark.
Morten Lund said there are three important things to be successful coders.
"Stamina, leadership with idea and focus with hard work can bring success." he added.
Coders Trust and BRAC University Computer Club have jointly presented an innovative new approach to micro financing education that upgrades the technological expertise of the youth in Bangladesh and makes individuals with limited means to become a part of the global technological job revolution as successful freelancers.
Millions of information technology based jobs are offered on a daily basis through online working portals, but Bangladeshi freelancers need the right qualifications in order to solve the tasks.
Coder Trust redefines the concept of virtual education and ties young people with online education directly.
It also redefines the idea on the basis of global online job markets demands.
It is creating freelancing micro entrepreneurs and also sustainable economic growth for developing countries like Bangladesh.
CodersTrust Founder Ferdinand Kjaerulff
Coders Trust is an initiative backed by the development fund Danida or Danish International Development Agency, to provide microfinance for students and freelancers in emerging nations who want to upgrade their programming skills.
Copenhagen-born entrepreneur Ferdinand Kjærulff, Coders Trust founder, expects that the students will be empowered with selling their work internationally via freelance portals such as Elance, oDesk and Freelancer.
The team is currently operating in Dhaka, Bangladesh, where it collaborates with Grameen solutions.
Skype founder Morten Lund invested in the company in March 2014, describing it as a 'profitable charity'.
Ferdinand said there are more than 150,000 registered freelancers who earn about $ 15 (Tk 1166) per hour for technical work and $ 7 for unskilled work.
There are 19.3 million users on the three largest online portals, of which 10% are eligible for the Coders Trust scheme.
Friday, January 3, 2014
দশম শ্রেণীর বিবাহিতা ছাত্রীর সঙ্গে প্রেম, হাতিরঝিলে আত্মহত্যা করল কিশোর

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