Saturday, December 23, 2017

Interesting Facts About Millionaires:

Swedish millionaire Johan Eliasch purchased 400,000 acres of the Amazon Rainforest from a logging company for $14,000,000 for the sole purpose of its preservation.

70% of millionaires do not consider themselves “wealthy”.

 A millionaire announced he would bury his Bentley for his afterlife. After lots of negative reaction, he revealed the publicity stunt about organ donations. “People bury things that are much more valuable than cars and nobody seems to care”.

Millionaire Michael O’Leary, CEO of airline Ryanair, has his own taxicab company with just one cab so he can legally use the bus lanes and avoid traffic jams.

In Finland, speeding tickets are calculated on a percentage of a person’s income. This causes some Finnish millionaires to face fines of over $100,000.

Despite being a millionaire, Steve Jobs only paid $500 a month in child support to his daughter, Lisa. A girl he named a computer after but attempted to deny paternity for.

A banker in a small Florida town encouraged people to buy shares of Coke during the Depression and now the town has “secret Coke millionaires”.

America’s first female self-made millionaire was a black woman.

Arnold Schwarzenegger was already a self-made millionaire at 22 years old before appearing in his first movie. He used what he learned in school to invest his bodybuilding contest winnings in real estate and to market gym equipment and exercise supplements.

George Lucas wants to build affordable housing on his land because ‘we’ve got enough millionaires’.

Microsoft has created an estimated 12,000 millionaires. 

The TV series ‘Frasier’ was very influential on Seattle. Newly wealthy software millionaires asked real-estate agents for apartments with a view of the Space Needle like what Frasier Crane has. The show helped the city’s culture to change from manufacturing and grunge to what it is today.

In 1959, the guy who wrote “Louie, Louie” sold the song’s rights for $750 to pay for his wedding. In the mid-80s, he was living on welfare with his mom in South Central LA, when a lawyer convinced him to take action to get the rights back. He settled out of court and became a millionaire. 

Sarah Rector, a young black girl, became a millionaire at the age of 11 in 1913 when the land she had been deeded under the Dawes Allotment Act produced a ‘gusher’ that brought in 2500 barrels of oil a day.

After a millionaire gave everyone in a Florida neighborhood free college scholarships and free daycare, the crime rate was cut in half and high school graduation rate increased from 25% to 100%.

Singapore has the world’s highest percentage of millionaires, with one out of every six households having at least $1,000,000 US dollars in disposable wealth.

At the time of death, Cornelius Vanderbilt was the world richest man and left an estate larger than the US treasury. When 120 of his descendants gathered in 1973, there was not a millionaire among them.

Donald Trump tried to sue an author for $5,000,000,000 (yes, billion) because the author called him a millionaire instead of a billionaire. 

Around 47% of Chinese millionaires plan to emigrate away from China, an additional 20% are not sure yet. 

Lady Bird Johnson was the first president’s wife to have become a millionaire in her own right before her husband was elected to office. 

If you started with $0.01 and doubled your money every day, it would take 27 days to become a millionaire.

Switzerland has more millionaires than recipients of social assistance.

The Majority of Congressmen are Millionaires.

A Florida millionaire was being sued for a wrongful death resulting from DUI, so he adopted his 42-year-old girlfriend because the court had ruled that the trust set up for his children could not be considered as part of his financial worth.

A kid made a bet with his parents that if he turned 18 and was a millionaire, they wouldn’t force him to go to college. He first invested in Bitcoin at the age of 12 and now holds investments worth over $1 million. He says he won’t be attending college

Thursday, December 21, 2017

Interesting Facts About Fingerprints:

Our fingerprints are developed while we’re still in the womb and are unique based on our movement, location in the womb and composition of our mother’s amniotic fluid.

A death row inmate in Tennessee discovered there were untested fingerprints that had been found at the original crime scene. In a last-ditch effort to prove his innocence, he successfully petitioned a judge to have the tests run. They were found to be his own fingerprints.

A hacker was able to recreate the fingerprint of the German Defense Minister from a photograph. This is the same hacker who defeated Apple’s thumbprint verification within 24 hours of the release of the iPhone 5S.

The Church of Scientology ran several smear campaigns against author Paulette Cooper, one of their critics, including Operation Freakout, the goal of which was to have her admitted to a mental institution. Another, Operation Dynamite, used Cooper’s fingerprints to send bomb threats to the Church. 

A 73-year-old woman bought a painting from a thrift store for $5 only to later discover that thanks to a fingerprint on the canvas, it was actually an unsigned Jackson Pollock worth millions of dollars.

William Herschel 2nd was the first person to use fingerprints on contracts. Also, he was the son of astronomer John Herschel who invented photography, who was also the son of William Herschel discoverer of Uranus among other things. 

Rolls-Royce offers a course called “White Glove Experience” to teach chauffeur’s how to, among other things, minimize fingerprints on door handles and brake the car without kickback. 

In crime-infested Ciudad Juarez Mexico, a city bordering Texas, a forensic expert Alejandro Hernandez uses a secret technique that he created, to rehydrate murdered mummified bodies making it easier to identify fingerprints and facial features from victims left to rot in the desert

Cops “mark” your driver’s side tail light or trunk with their fingerprints when they pull you over, just in case something goes bad for them. 

If a dead body goes undiscovered long enough for skin-slip to start and there’s no one to identify the body, forensics can cut the skin around your wrist, slip the skin off, and wear it like a glove in order to get the fingerprints.

There are “marijuana vending machines” in the United States which allow prescribed users to scan their fingerprints to acquire a medicinal dosage of marijuana.

Adermatoglyphia is a disease where people are born without fingerprints. It is exceedingly rare, affecting only four known extended families worldwide.

The world’s oldest fingerprint was discovered in Kuwait on a piece of broken clay pot dating from the Stone Age. The print is 7,300 years old.

In 2007 CBS released a CSI toy which included a fingerprint dusting powder that contained up to 5% asbestos. Finally, 20 months after an asbestos victims’ organization made this fact public a recall was carried out.

Whilst hiding out at Leatherslade Farm the robbers involved in executing The Great Train Robbery, played Monopoly with the real money they had just stolen; leaving incriminating fingerprints on the board game which led to the arrest and imprisonment of most of the gang. 

Apple’s iPhone Touch ID can tell a difference between the fingerprint of a living and deceased person, so if you are dead no one would be able to access your iPhone using your touch ID. 

Crime Scene fingerprint dust causes several health problems, even leading to Cancer

Fingerprints can now be evidence of drug use. A handheld device uses a gold nanoparticle solution which sticks to the breakdown products of drugs as they sweat out through the pores in the fingertips. The particles are stained with a fluorescent dye which leaves a fittingly trippy pattern.

Identical twins are indistinguishable via DNA testing, but fingerprints can still tell them apart.

Richard Ramirez, the Night Stalker of Southern California in the 1980’s, was one of the first criminals apprehended by the use of the DOJ’s Automated Fingerprint Identification System.

Wednesday, December 20, 2017

Facts About Organ Donations:

Organ transplant networks have started using a pairing algorithm to find kidney donation pairs and chains for willing but incompatible matches to swap donors resulting in a 50% increase incompatible matches.

Steve Jobs’ doctors correctly predicted that the St. Patrick’s Day/March Madness weekend would cause fatalities that would yield the organ donation he needed.

A millionaire announced he would bury his Bentley for his afterlife. After lots of negative reaction, he revealed the publicity stunt about organ donations. “People bury things that are much more valuable than cars and nobody seems to care”.

China is allegedly engaged in mass organ harvesting from prisoners of conscience, with 41,500 unexplained organ donations.

In the Judge Dredd universe, corpses are taken to “Resyk Centers” where they are recycled for food, manufacturing and organ donation. Funeral services are frequently held at Resyk so the bereaved can say goodbye to their loved ones, and purchase reasonably priced souvenirs at the gift shop.

To increase awareness about a lack of organ donors, a Dutch reality TV show had contestants in need of a kidney compete for a donation. It was revealed as a hoax, but within a month, 7,300 new people were registered as organ donors and 50,000 had requested paperwork to become a donor.

Hospitals often fly the “Donate Life” flag (just beneath the US Flag) to honor a recent organ donation. Families are also offered a flag to keep to honor their lost loved one.

While 69 to 75% of US adults say they would be willing to become organ donors, half of the families that are asked to consider donating the organs of a deceased family member refuse to consent. Families are able to refuse donation even when it is the expressed wishes of the deceased to donate.

Beating Heart Cadavers is dead humans kept “alive” by mechanical ventilators to preserve organs for donation.

Almost every major religion accepts and even encourages organ donation.

Virtually all brain-dead patients are potential candidates for organ donation, even those with specific infections or metastatic cancer. Donors with hepatitis can give organs to recipients who also have hepatitis; those with metastatic cancer can donate corneas.

Nicholas Green was the young boy whose tragic death in a car accident in Italy sparked a dramatic increase in European organ donations. There is a memorial bell tower dedicated to him in his hometown.

Organ donation rates are significantly lower in Japan due to cultural views on death.

Rh blood group system, the most important after ABO, only becomes relevant if a negative blood type is exposed to a positive. This is relevant primarily in childbirth and organ donation.

More widespread seat belt use in the 90s caused a shift towards using ‘less-than-pristine’ organs for donation (from 1960s-80s, the majority of donors were young, head trauma victims without health issues losing this pool meant finding alternatives).

Tuesday, December 19, 2017

Interesting Facts About Airports:

To help airline passengers deal with travel anxiety, San Francisco International Airport has hired the nation’s first airport therapy pig. LiLou wears costumes and performs tricks to help travelers calm down before boarding their flights.

In Rwanda, plastic bags are illegal and carry with them a 100-$150 fine. In fact, at airport customs all plastic bags are confiscated which has resulted in Rwanda is one of the most litter-free countries in Africa.

Genoa Airport in Italy makes one exception to the 3 ounces of liquid rule for pesto, which goes through a special pesto scanner.

An airline pilot ordered 30 pizzas for his passengers, after finding out they would be delayed 2 hours for weather. The pizzas were delivered within 30 minutes by Domino’s and were cleared by security and sent directly to the plane in an official airport vehicle. 

O’Hare airport is named after an American fighter pilot who was the lone defender during an attack on his career, then was killed leading the first night defense against a Kamikaze attack. Two years earlier, his own father was murdered for being the only man willing to testify against Al Capone. 

Airport runway numbers actually indicate direction on a compass. 

When three-letter airport codes became standard, airports that had been using two letters simply added an X.

Houston Airport received many complaints about baggage wait times. In response, they moved baggage claim further away so the walk was longer than the wait. The number of complaints dropped.

Denver International Airport (at 53 sq miles) is larger than Manhattan, San Francisco, and Miami and is the 2nd largest airport in the world.

During the peak of Ebola news in 2014 people started to avoid Liberia Airport in Costa Rica thinking that it was the country in Africa

Yugoslavia spent $6 billion constructing an underground airport that can withstand a direct strike from a 20 kiloton nuclear warhead.

There is a store in Alabama where you can buy items found in unclaimed airport items of baggage.

A Boeing 727 aircraft was stolen out of an airport in 2003. Neither the plane nor the two men aboard were ever found.

The toilets at Amsterdam’s Schiphol Airport pass the white-glove test. A realistic looking housefly is painted inside the men urinals so that men will aim at the fly and try to wash it down the drain. The fly-in-urinal research found that the etching reduced spillage by 80 percent.

San Francisco International Airport is essentially built on top of 267 ball bearings whose support columns are capable of moving 20 inches any direction during an earthquake.

Students use the Conakry International Airport parking lot lights to study as it is one of the few illuminated public places in a country that only 5% has access to electricity.

In 4 out of 10 of the UK’s largest airports, it is cheaper to park a light aircraft for 24 hours than to park your car.

There is a library in Estonian Airport, where you can borrow books for your trip and the whole thing operates off an honor system. 

Some Colorado airports have marijuana amnesty boxes for passengers who want to dispose their medicine before a flight. 

Using facial recognition software, an airport’s vending machine dispensed free coffee for anyone who yawned.

The Tijuana International Airport in Mexico lies along the US border and even includes a terminal on the US side, making it the only airport to have terminals in two countries. 

Schiphol Airport sends Heathrow a cake when a delay in its expansion occurs as a thank you for helping their own airport increase numbers.

Only 8 pilots are certified to land at Paro Airport, Himalaya. It’s considered the most challenging airport to land at in the world.

Less than 30% of Chinese airspace is available for commercial use, compared to over 80% in the US. This is one of the main reasons why Chinese airports see so many delays and cancellations each day. 

Carrying Arabic flashcards is considered a valid reason for arrest in a US airport.

Monday, December 18, 2017

Not a Wonder..!!

Image may contain: 1 person, text

And then they were told to stop asking questions because the person they look up to for answers failed as a human being.

Sunday, December 17, 2017

Are Toward and Towards Different?

Is that car hurtling toward you or towards you? Are you looking toward or towards a fulfilling retirement? While the meaning of “toward” and “towards” are contextually the same, much like “gray” and “grey,” where and how they are used can make a difference.

As typically used to mean “in the direction of,” toward and towards are equally acceptable spellings. According to the Chicago Manual of Style and the Associated Press Stylebook, toward is preferred when writing for American and Canadian English speakers, while towards — with the ending “s” — is preferred by English speaking persons outside of North America.

However, both manuals note that these are merely recommendations, not hard-and-fast rules, and exceptions are common.

While the Oxford English Dictionary suggests that towards is a more colloquial or informal usage in British English, most grammarians say there is little evidence that this is true in modern British writing.

However, it should be noted that the rules of formal English writing do not always apply in informal settings. For example, American writers and speakers, when intentionally attempting to write or speak in a more colloquial or “down-home” style sometimes use towards rather than toward. In such cases, the use of towards in North American English is completely acceptable.

USAGE OF TOWARD AND TOWARDS
As a preposition, toward and towards are commonly used interchangeably in these cases:
  • In the direction of something or somebody — “The train was headed toward the French border.” — “Her back was toward me.”
  • Getting closer to achieving something — “The research is a major step toward a cure.”
  • Getting closer to a point in time — “Storm clouds usually gather toward sundown.”
  • In relation to somebody — “She held warm feelings toward her old school.” — “The poem expressed his attitude toward war.”
  • Obtaining things of material value — “Your donation will go toward a new library.”

HISTORY OF TOWARD AND TOWARDS


Coming from the Old English word tóweard, also generally meaning “in the direction of,” toward is the older spelling, originating during the 5th century. Towards rose in popularity, eventually becoming the dominant spelling during the 17th century. However, there have been some exceptions to this history. For example, Geoffrey Chaucer wrote his classic "The Canterbury Tales" in Middle English between 1387 and 1400 in a time before English language spelling had become standardized. Despite writing a purely British text, Chaucer uses toward — the modern accepted North American English spelling — throughout "The Canterbury Tales."
Towards remained the most common spelling among all English speakers until American English speakers turned to toward during the 19th century.
A study of American books, magazines, and newspapers published from 1800 to 2000 shows that the transition from the once British-favored towards to the now North American-favored toward began around 1900.
Similar studies of British books and periodicals published during the same period show that while towards remains heavily favored today, the use of toward seems to be on the rise.

THE ‘WARD’ AND ‘WARDS’ SUFFIXES

Toward and towards are far from the only similarly-spelled “directional” words.
Over the centuries, the suffixes “ward” and “wards” have given rise to several similar words. Today, the same general rule of interchangeability that applies to toward and towards applies to word pairs such as forward and forwards; backward and backwards; upward and upwards; downward and downwards; and afterward and afterwards.

EXAMPLES OF TOWARD AND TOWARDS IN PUBLICATIONS

By a ratio of about 10 to 1, newspapers and magazines in the United Kingdom and Australia favor the use towards rather than toward. For example, quotations from these news sources demonstrate their predominant usage of towards:
The Daily Mail: “Libyan rebels advanced west towards Tripoli today after seeing off yet more airstrikes on captured cities by an increasingly desperate Colonel Gaddafi.”
The Guardian: “A few months later, towards December, they circle back completing a round trip of several hundred kilometers.”
Australian Associated Press: “Scientists are moving towards the conclusion that the eastern cougar was erroneously classified as a separate subspecies in the first place.”
Edinburgh Evening News: “Police began a surveillance operation and on December 23 last year saw David Smith leave his home and head towards a car.”
American and Canadian publications, on the other hand, show a similar ratio of preference for toward:
The New York Times: “Scientists are moving toward the conclusion that the eastern cougar was erroneously classified as a separate subspecies in the first place.”
The Globe and Mail (Canada): “To be sure, China is already seeing a shift away from exports toward domestic purchases as its sales to places like Europe falter.”
USA Today: “One inning Tuesday went a long way toward erasing any questions the Minnesota Twins might have about their closer.”

Book 08: A Thousand Pieces of You By Claudia Gray

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