Eid day celebration

The night and first day of syawal..i went to mosque to takbir hari raya.


the food during the Eid dul fitri.



The tradition in my vilage

That all,i hope u enjoy read my blog

Eid Card For All My friends


Assalmualaikum to all my beloved friends
i hope u happy in this eid dul fitri
here was provide 1 card eid for all my friends



To all my friends i hope u enjoy your hari raye
i want to applogize from what i have done to u
either u know or u don't know
let make this hari raye became more meaningful
to all of us.
may Allah blessing all of u..











The Danger Using Handpone

Assalamualaikum...
Hi, everyone !!!
Today I want to share some information about the danger using cell phone...

Mobile phone users may be placing there health at risk from electromagnetic radiation.According to recent medical study symptoms such as fatigue, headachs, burning sensation on the skin,are common among those who make longer mobile phone calls.At the same time there are a growing number of unconfirmed reports of individuals whose health has been affected after chronic frequent use of mobile phones,pesumable from radiation effects on their bodies

A cellular phone is basically a radio that sends signals on waves to a base station. The carrier signal generates two types of radiation fields: a near-field plume and a far-field plume. Living organisms, too, generate electromagnetic fields at the cellular, tissue, organ, and organism level; this is called the biofield. Both the near-field and far-field plumes from cell phones and in the environment can wreak havoc with the human biofield, and when the biofield is compromised in any way, says Dr. Carlo, so is metabolism and physiology.
“The near field plume is the one we’re most concerned with. This plume that’s generated within five or six inches of the center of a cell phone’s antenna is determined by the amount of power necessary to carry the signal to the base station,” he explains. “The more power there is, the farther the plume radiates the dangerous information-carrying radio waves.”
A carrier wave oscillates at 1900 megahertz (MHz) in most phones, which is mostly invisible to our biological tissue and doesn’t do damage. The information-carrying secondary wave necessary to interpret voice or data is the problem, says Dr. Carlo. That wave cycles in a hertz (Hz) range familiar to the body. Your heart, for example, beats at two cycles per second, or two Hz. Our bodies recognize the information-carrying wave as an “invader,” setting in place protective biochemical reactions that alter physiology and cause biological problems that include intracellular free-radical buildup, leakage in the blood-brain barrier, genetic damage, disruption of intercellular communication, and an increase in the risk of tumors. The health dangers of recognizing the signal, therefore, aren’t from direct damage, but rather are due to the biochemical responses in the cell.
Here’s what happens:
  • Cellular energy is now used for protection rather than metabolism. Cell membranes harden, keeping nutrients out and waste products in.
  • Waste accumulating inside the cells creates a higher concentration of free radicals, leading to both disruption of DNA repair (micronuclei) and cellular dysfunction.
  • Unwanted cell death occurs, releasing the micronuclei from the disrupted DNA repair into the fluid between cells (interstitial fluid), where they are free to replicate and proliferate. This, says Dr. Carlo, is the most likely mechanism that contributes to cancer.
  • Damage occurs to proteins on the cell membrane, resulting in disruption of intercellular communication. When cells can’t communicate with each other, the result is impaired tissue, organ, and organism function. In the blood-brain barrier, for example, cells can’t keep dangerous chemicals from reaching the brain tissue, which results in damage.
With the background levels of information-carrying radio waves dramatically increasing because of the widespread use of cell phones,Wi-Fi, and other wireless communication, the effects from the near and far-fields are very similar. Overall, says Dr. Carlo, almost all of the acute and chronic symptoms seen in electrosensitive patients can be explained in some part by disrupted intercellular communication. These symptoms of electrosensitivity include inability to sleep, general malaise, and headaches. Could this explain the increase in recent years of conditions such as attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), autism, and anxiety disorder?
“One thing all these conditions have in common is a disruption, to varying degrees, of intercellular communication. When we were growing up, TV antennas were on top of our houses and such waves were up in the sky. Cell phones and Wi-Fi have brought those things down to the street, integrated them into the environment, and that’s absolutely new. The recognition mechanism, where protein vibration sensors on the cell membrane pick up a signal and interpret it as an invader, only works because the body recognizes something it’s never seen before.”
As to increases in brain tumors tied to cell phone use, it’s too early to tell due to a lack of hard data, says Dr. Carlo. “We’re never going to see that in time to have it matter. Here in the US, we’re six years behind in getting the brain tumor database completed, and currently the best data are from 1999. By the time you see any data showing an increase, the ticking time bomb is set.”
Epidemic curve projections, however, indicate that in 2006, we can expect to see 40,000 to 50,000 cases of brain and eye cancer. This is based on published peer-reviewed studies that allow calculation of risk and construction of epidemic curves. By 2010, says Dr. Carlo, expect that number to be between 400,000 and 500,000 new cases worldwide.
“This means we’re on the beginning curve of an epidemic, with epidemic defined as a change in the occurrence of a disease that is so dramatic in its increase that it portends serious public health consequences,” says Dr. Carlo. “This is what’s not being told to the public. One of the things that I suggest to people who use a cell phone is to use an air tube headset. If you use a wired headset, the current moving through the wire of the headset attracts ambient informational carrying radio waves and thereby increases your exposure.”




The Giant oF Octupus

Assalamualaikum..
Today I want to share an interesting story to you all,
it is about the giant squid.


The giant Pacific octopus is an amazing looking creature. They grow larger than any other octopus breed, with an average size of 9 to 16 feet (2.7 to 4.9 meters) and an average weight of 22 to 110 pounds (10 to 50 kilograms). The largest giant pacific octopus ever recorded was 30 ft. (91.4 meters) long and had a weight of 600 pounds (272.2 kilograms). Unlike humans, male giant Pacific octopus grow faster than females, but normally end up smaller. The average arm span of a giant Pacific octopus is 14 feet and the average arm length is 8 feet.
Giant Pacific octopus have a large bulbous head and 8 arms (referred to as arms not tentacles). Giant Pacific octopus have suckers on each arm, which allows them to latch on to surfaces. Giant Pacific octopus also have a large beak that can easily puncture and tear through shells. As a part of its mouth giant Pacific octopus has a barbed tongue, which is able to fish animals like crabs or mollusks out of their shells.  The giant Pacific octopus is of a reddish brow color, but like other species of octopus, they have the ability to change the color of their skin to fit their surroundings.


The giant Pacific octopus’ habitat is quite extraordinary. The giant Pacific octopus lives in places around the Pacific Ocean (hence the name). They mainly live on the coast of Japan, southern California, North America’s Pacific, the Aleutian Islands, and Alaska. They live between shallow waters (below low tide) and depths of 1,500 feet. Giant Pacific octopus live near rocky coastlines and in dens and caves around rocky areas. Small octopus normally build dens in sand shell areas. Most giant Pacific octopus live in deep water from February to April and August to October.

Life Cycle


Although giant Pacific octopus are huge, they did not start off that way. When giant Pacific octopus are born they are eggs. After seven months the eggs hatch into larvae. The larvae then swim to the surface and live as plankton for about 2 months. The ones that survive go to the ocean floor. From that point they grow quickly. Males and females reach maturity between 2 and 3 years of age, at 12 pounds for males and 20 pounds for females. Males transform one arm (normally the third or fifth) into a mating arm. Mating happens between the depths of 65.6 and 328 feet (20 to 100 meters) and takes several hours. The male dies about 2 to 3 months after mating. The female lays 20,000 to 100,000 eggs, which she strings from the ceiling of her den. The female takes care of the eggs by doing things like blowing water on them until they hatch. The female dies shortly after the eggs hatch.



Giant Pacific octopus have a very interesting way of capturing and eating food. Giant Pacific octopus are carnivores and a giant Pacific octopus’ diet consists of shrimp, clams, lobsters, bivalves, crabs, mollusks, and crustaceans. It has been seen that giant Pacific octopus eat sharks, birds, and fish, but it is a rare occurrence. Giant Pacific octopus normally hunt at night. The reason giant Pacific octopus eat animals with shells is because they are easy to catch. They get into the shell with their strong beak like mouth. Then they erode the shell while their saliva detaches the animal from the shell. Then they can pull the animal out with their barbed tongue. Although giant Pacific octopus are large when they are grown, they are still prey to some animals in their egg, larvae, and juvenile form. These animals are the harbor seal, sperm whale, and sea otter.


Environmental Problems


Conclusion


As you can see the giant Pacific octopus is an amazing creature because of all of its abilities. That why all of we should protect our ecosystem that life seabed is not extinct.





My friends


Farhan faiz.this is my classmate.he smart and also intelegent.

The thing that i like him,when he do something he make seriously.and the thing why i hate him when he talk
he will talk directly,without thinking their friends.

My BeSt FrieNd

Muhamad Rosnizam


       This is my best Friend.He always help me when i need a help,I also help him if he need my help.
we always make something together,he became my best friend since i am 13 years old.until Now we are still contact each other,unfotunately i have no pictures together with him.That it for him thank you.



Little bit About mY background

  Assalamualaikum..
 
     My name is Mohamad Saiful Bin Sakiran,I came from Sabak Bernam
Selangor Darul Ehsan..

     I studied at kuis,I am taking diploma in computer science.I choose this cost because it challengging.Beside that i want to a programer in the future.

    Thus,i need to work hard to make my ambition became true.I also have one dream,where 5 year from now,I want contribute one software that can help many of us to show of qibla for prayer.

      In view of.To make this software is dificult i will collobrate with my all classmate,to build this software
and i hope this dream will became a reality.

     Lastly,I hope this software will grow to anywhere.

Wasalam