Saturday, May 16, 2015

SHOCKING AND AMAZING NEPRA HEARING FOR ALLEGED K-ELECTRIC HELD ON 06-03-2015 AT MARRIOTT HOTEL KARACHI. اس سماعت میں جس کو بڑے بڑے میڈیا مالکان نے اپنے رپورٹروں کو نہ بھیج کر میڈیا کوریج سے روکنے کی بھرپور کوشش کی گئی ہے اور آج کے اخبارات میں اس سماعت کا ذکر نہیں ہے جبکہ ٹرانسپیرینسی انٹرنیشنل کے عادل گیلانی صاحب بھی اس سماعت میں بحث کر چکے ہیں۔اس سماعت میں بہت ہی اہم ڈکیتیوں کے انکشافات ہوئے ہیں ...

Wednesday, January 15, 2014

Monday, January 24, 2011

Optimum health care

Optimum health care: "It is the platform which provides complete health information and offer maximum health care for you. Maximum health care for you is now easiest. It gives information about diseases, drugs, herbs and nutrients. It gives health care for infant, children, old and young."

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Snooker Games



 snooker games is a fun game for beginner or professional player, it requires skill, a keen eye and a steady arm. Read on and learn why the snooker games is so widely adopted and why it is so much fun!.Playing snooker is easier than you think. It may look hard, and it is! But everyone can play and with a bit of practice can get good at snooker. Talent is a major ingredient to being good at snooker games, however you can still play a good game if you practice hard and are disciplined.Snooker is a cue sport that is played on a large baize-covered table with pockets in each of the four corners and in the middle of each of the long side cushionsA player or team wins a frame individual snooker games by scoring more points than the opponent(s), using the cue ball to pot the red and coloured balls. A player wins a match when a certain number of frames have been won.Snooker, generally regarded as having been invented in India by British Army officers, is particularly popular in many of the English-speaking and Commonwealth countries, with top professional players attaining multi-million pound career earnings from the snooker games

Snooker tables


 


Snooker Table Sizes
Snooker tables are available, in 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 and 12 foot snooker table sizes.
Snooker Table weight

A full size snooker table weighs between 1000 and 1150 kilograms, dependant on the make, model and build specification of the item. Smaller tables decrease in weight due the table size and reduced components used in the tables production.

Snooker Table:

• Fitted with 100% English pure wool napped cloth

• Diamond bench precision ground slate bed playing surface.

• Available in solid Mahogany, Oak and Ash hardwoods.

• Available in 7, 8, 9, 10 and 12 foot table sizes.

• High performance match-play rubber assembly fitted to all six cushions rails.

• Solid brass pocket plates and broad bow pocket leathers, pocket nets and pocket rails.

• Table legs are turned with vertical routing.

Cushion sliding panels available left plain, or with vertical routing.

All table wood is hand polished and finished.

Snooker Balls


Snooker Ball sets for the sport of snooker look at first glance like a mixture of American- and British-style pool balls. There are twenty-two snooker balls in total, arranged as a rack of fifteen unmarked reds, six coloursnooker balls placed at various predetermined spots on the table, and a white cue ball. The colour balls are sometimes numbered American-style, with their point values, for the amateur/home market. They are numbered as follows:


2. Yellow

3. Green

4. Brown

5. Blue

6. Pink

7. Black

Snooker Balls are technically standardized at 52.5 mm (approximately 21⁄15 in) in diameter within a tolerance of plus or minus 0.05 mm (0.002 in.) No standard weight is defined, but all balls in the set must be the same weight within a tolerance of 3 g. However, many sets are actually 21⁄16 in. (a little under 52.4 mm), even from major manufacturers. Snooker sets are also available with considerably smaller-than-regulation balls (and even with ten instead of fifteen reds) for play on smaller tables (down to half-size), and are sanctioned for use in some amateurleagues

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

Snooker Rules

There are 15 solid red balls each with a value of 1 point. The (other) colored balls are valued thus: Yellow (2), Green (3), Brown (4), Blue (5), Pink (6), Black (7). The cue ball is white (not shown).


The cue ball is placed within the "D" for the break

Think of snooker as a game whereby sinking a red ball earns the player an opportunity to go after one of the colored balls. Therefore, the player must pocket alternately a red and then a "colored" ball.

After pocketing a red ball, the player may shoot at his choice of colored ball.

After pocketing a red ball, the player may shoot at his choice of colored balls. If he sinks a colored ball, it is respotted to its assigned spot (diagram above), and the shooter may attempt to pocket another red ball, followed by any colored ball. All red balls stay down, but the colored balls are respotted immediately after being pocketed. Play continues this way until there are no red balls remaining on the table.

When all of the red balls have cleared from the table, the remaining colored balls are pocketed in ascending order from where the cue and object balls lie.

A player is awarded one point for each red pocketed, and the numerical value of each colored ball pocketed after his turn at the table is ended by a miss. If a shooter fouls, the opponent is awarded 7 points (no point deduction from offenders score.)