Tuesday 17 July 2012

The World's Most Valuable Sports Teams



1.            Manchester United - $2.23 Billion

2.            Real Madrid - $1.88 Billion

3.            New York Yankees - $1.85 Billion

4.            Dallas Cowboys - $1.85 Billion

5.            Washington Redskins - $1.56 Billion

6.            Los Angeles Dodgers - $1.4 Billion

7.            New England Patriots - $1.4 Billion

8.            Barcelona - $1.31 Billion

9.            New York Giants - $1.3 Billion

10.          Arsenal - $1.29 Billion

Source: Forbes

Wednesday 11 July 2012

The Ten Best Places In The World To Be Gay


1. San Fransisco

2. Sydney

3. New York

4. Mykonos

5. Paris

6. Barcelona

7. Amsterdam

8. London

9. Copenhagen

10. Berlin


Souce: The Independent




Top Ten Most Popular Cakes In The UK

One in 20 Brits said they eat cake up to four times a week.

Nearly half of those polled said women were far greedier at scoffing it.

Top 10 cakes:

1. Chocolate sponge

2. Victoria sponge

3. Black Forest gateau

4. Carrot cake

5. Coffee cake

6. Battenburg

7. Fruit cake

8. Christmas cake

9. Banana cake

10. Angel cake


Source: Good food channel

Friday 6 July 2012

9 Beliefs of Remarkably Successful People


1. Time doesn't fill me. I fill time.

Deadlines and time frames establish parameters, but typically not in a good way. The average person who is given two weeks to complete a task will instinctively adjust his effort so it actually takes two weeks.

Forget deadlines, at least as a way to manage your activity. Tasks should only take as long as they need to take. Do everything as quickly and effectively as you can. Then use your "free" time to get other things done just as quickly and effectively.

Average people allow time to impose its will on them; remarkable people impose their will on their time.


2. The people around me are the people I chose.

Some of your employees drive you nuts. Some of your customers are obnoxious. Some of your friends are selfish, all-about-me jerks.

You chose them. If the people around you make you unhappy it's not their fault. It's your fault. They're in your professional or personal life because you drew them to you--and you let them remain.

Think about the type of people you want to work with. Think about the types of customers you would enjoy serving. Think about the friends you want to have.

Then change what you do so you can start attracting those people. Hardworking people want to work with hardworking people. Kind people like to associate with kind people. 

Remarkable employees want to work for remarkable bosses.

Successful people are naturally drawn to successful people.


3. I have never paid my dues.

Dues aren't paid, past tense. Dues get paid, each and every day. The only real measure of your value is the tangible contribution you make on a daily basis.

No matter what you've done or accomplished in the past, you're never too good to roll up your sleeves, get dirty, and do the grunt work.  No job is ever too menial, no task ever too unskilled or boring.

Remarkably successful people never feel entitled--except to the fruits of their labor.


4. Experience is irrelevant. Accomplishments are everything.

You have "10 years in the Web design business." Whoopee. I don't care how long you've been doing what you do. Years of service indicate nothing; you could be the worst 10-year programmer in the world.

I care about what you've done: how many sites you've created, how many back-end systems you've installed, how many customer-specific applications you've developed (and what kind)... all that matters is what you've done.

Successful people don't need to describe themselves using hyperbolic adjectives like passionate, innovative, driven, etc. 

They can just describe, hopefully in a humble way, what they've done.


5. Failure is something I accomplish; it doesn't just happen to me.

Ask people why they have been successful. Their answers will be filled with personal pronouns: I, me, and the sometimes too occasional we.

Ask them why they failed. Most will revert to childhood and instinctively distance themselves, like the kid who says, "My toy got broken..." instead of, "I broke my toy."

They'll say the economy tanked. They'll say the market wasn't ready. They'll say their suppliers couldn't keep up.

They'll say it was someone or something else.

And by distancing themselves, they don't learn from their failures.

Occasionally something completely outside your control will cause you to fail. Most of the time, though, it's you. And that's okay. Every successful person has failed. Numerous times. Most of them have failed a lot more often than you. That's why they're successful now.

Embrace every failure: Own it, learn from it, and take full responsibility for making sure that next time, things will turn out differently.


6. Volunteers always win.

Whenever you raise your hand you wind up being asked to do more.

That's great. Doing more is an opportunity: to learn, to impress, to gain skills, to build new relationships--to do something more than you would otherwise been able to do.

Success is based on action. The more you volunteer, the more you get to act. Successful people step forward to create opportunities.

Remarkably successful people sprint forward.


7. As long as I'm paid well, it's all good.

Specialization is good. Focus is good. Finding a niche is good.

Generating revenue is great.

Anything a customer will pay you a reasonable price to do--as long as it isn't unethical, immoral, or illegal--is something you should do. 

Your customers want you to deliver outside your normal territory? If they'll pay you for it, fine. They want you to add services you don't normally include? If they'll pay you for it, fine. The customer wants you to perform some relatively manual labor and you're a high-tech shop? Shut up, roll 'em up, do the work, and get paid.

Only do what you want to do and you might build an okay business. Be willing to do what customers want you to do and you can build a successful business.

Be willing to do even more and you can build a remarkable business.

And speaking of customers...


8. People who pay me always have the right to tell me what to do.

Get over your cocky, pretentious, I-must-be-free-to-express-my-individuality self. Be that way on your own time.

The people who pay you, whether customers or employers, earn the right to dictate what you do and how you do it--sometimes down to the last detail.

Instead of complaining, work to align what you like to do with what the people who pay you want you to do.

Then you turn issues like control and micro-management into non-issues.


9. The extra mile is a vast, unpopulated wasteland.

Everyone says they go the extra mile. Almost no one actually does. Most people who go there think, "Wait... no one else is here... why am I doing this?" and leave, never to return.

That's why the extra mile is such a lonely place.

That's also why the extra mile is a place filled with opportunities.

Be early. Stay late. Make the extra phone call. Send the extra email. Do the extra research. Help a customer unload or unpack a shipment. Don't wait to be asked; offer. Don't just tell employees what to do--show them what to do and work beside them.

Every time you do something, think of one extra thing you can do--especially if other people aren't doing that one thing. 

Sure, it's hard.

But that's what will make you different.

And over time, that's what will make you incredibly successful.

Source: Inc

Monday 25 June 2012

50 Signs You've Grown Up...



1. Owning a mortgage

2. Mum and dad no longer make your financial decisions

3. Paying into a pension

4. Conducting a weekly food shop

5. Written a Will

6. Having children

7. Budgeting every month

8. Being able to cook an evening meal from scratch

9. Getting married

10. Having life insurance

11. Recycling

12. Having a savings account

13. Knowing what terms like 'ISA' and 'tracker' mean

14. Watching the news

15. Owning a lawn mower

16. Doing your own washing

17. Taking trips to the local tip

18. Planting flowers

19. Being able to bleed a radiator

20. Having a joint bank account

21. Having a view on politics

22. Keeping track of interest rates

23. Finding a messy house annoying

24. Being able to change a light bulb

25. Owning a vacuum cleaner

26. Holding dinner parties

27. Listening to Radio 2

28. Enjoying gardening

29. Spending weekend just 'pottering'

30. Mum starts asking you for advice

31. Carrying spare shopping bags just in case

32.Like going round garden centres

33. Wearing coats on a night out

34. Going to bed before 11pm

35. Making sure mum and dad are phoned at least once a week

36. Classing work as a career rather than a job

37. Repairing torn clothing rather than throwing it away

38. You iron

39. You wash up immediately after eating

40. Enjoy cooking

41. Buying a Sunday paper

42. Always going out with a sensible pair of shoes

43. You like receiving gift vouchers

44. Work keeps you awake at night

45. Filing post

46. Having a 'best' crockery set

47. Being able to change a car tyre

48. Being sensible enough to remove make up off before bedtime

49. Being able to follow a receipt

50. Owning 'best towels' as well as 'everyday towels'


Friday 22 June 2012

Top 20 Most Popular Followed Journalists (by MPs)...




1 - @ITVLauraK - is followed by 222 MPs

2 - @paulwaugh - 198

3 - @TimMontgomerie - 164

4 - @afneil - 156

5 - @Kevin_Maguire - 155

6 - @GuidoFawkes - 154

6 - @SamCoatesTimes - 154

8 - @adamboultonSKY - 152

9 - @frasernelson - 151

10 - @MichaelLCrick - 149

10 - @andrewrawnsley - 149

12 - @MichaelWhite - 142

13 - @cathynewman - 141

13 - @benedictbrogan - 141

15 - @JohnRentoul - 134

15 - @Dannythefink 134

17 - @Peston - 131

18 - @MirrorJames - 126

19 - @jonsnowC4 - 124

20 - @EvanHD - 119



And 

The 20 Most Followed Media Accounts by MP's...


1 - @BBCr4today - 170

2 - @BBCPolitics - 164

3 - @daily_politics - 162

4 - @BBCBreaking - 159

5 - @BBCNewsnight - 152

6 - @GdnPolitics - 144

7 - @guardiannews - 128

8 - @SkyNewsBreak - 121

9 - @ftwestminster - 117

10 - @SkyNews - 116

11 - @bbcquestiontime - 106

12 - @Channel4News - 104

13 - @Sun_Politics - 91

14 - @Spectator_CH - 84

15 - @PrivateEyeNews - 83

16 - @NewStatesman - 80

17 - @TelePolitics - 79

18 - @spectator - 78

19 - @SkyNewsPolitics - 77

20 - @ST_Newsroom - 72


Source: Tweetminster


Thursday 21 June 2012

Highest paid sports stars of 2012...



Floyd Mayweather $85m (£54.25m)*

Manny Pacquiao $62m (£39.57m)

Tiger Woods $59.4m (£37.92m)

LeBron James $53m (£33.84m)

Roger Federer $52.7m (£33.64)

Kobe Bryant $52.3m (£33.38m)

Phil Mickelson $47.8m (£30.51m)

David Beckham $46m (£29.36m)

Cristiano Ronaldo $42.5m (£27.10m)

10 Peyton Manning $42.4m (£27.06m)

Source: Forbes

*Boxer Mayweather, is currently serving a three-month jail sentence for domestic assault.

Thursday 14 June 2012

Top Ten Catchiest TV Jingles (UK)


1. Just one Cornetto, give it to me (Cornetto)

2. Go Compare, Go Compare (Go Compare)

3. P-P-P-Pick up a Penguin (Penguin)

4. A Mars a day helps you work rest and play (Mars)

5. I feel like Chicken Tonight (Chicken Tonight)

6. Do the shake and vac and put the freshness back    (Shake n’ Vac)

7. If you like a lot of chocolate on your biscuit, join our club  (Club)

8. We buy any car, dot com (Webuyanycar.com)

9. I’m Loving It (McDonalds)

10. Washing machines live long with Calgon (Calgon)


The survey says we spend on average 58 minutes a week with a jingle stuck in our
head, which equates to a staggering two days a year.

What’s more, it takes us an average of almost 17 minutes to stop humming or singing a
catchy tune and forget it.
The research was carried out on behalf of Chicken Tonight.

Wednesday 13 June 2012

Top 20 Countries With The Biggest Amount Of Debt.


External Debt as a percentage of GDP.


1. Ireland: 1,239%

Debt Per Person: $478,087

Total Debt = $2.26 trillion


2. United Kingdom: 451.4%

Debt Per Person: $161,110

Total Debt = $10.157 trillion


3. Switzerland: 391.3%

Debt Per Person: $174,022

Total Debt = $1.332 trillion

 4. Netherlands: 367%

Debt Per Person: $154,820

Total Debt = $2.590 trillion


5. Belgium: 353.7%

Debt Per Person: $139,613

Total Debt = $1.457 trillion


6. Denmark: 283.2%

Debt Per Person: $106,680

Total Debt = $591.4 billion


7. Hong Kong: 265.7%

Debt Per Person: $131,380

Total Debt = $939.83 billion


8. Sweden: 262.3%

Debt Per Person: $109,318

Total Debt = $995.2 trillion


9. France: 254.4%

Debt Per Person: $85,824

Total Debt = $5.632 trillion


10. Norway: 246.9%

Debt Per Person: $138,783

Total Debt = $653.29 billion


11. Finland: 244.8%

Debt Per Person: $90,984

Total Debt = $478.84 billion


12. Austria: 241.3%

Debt Per Person: $103,160

Total Debt = $847.95 billion


13. Portugal: 207.3%

Debt Per Person: $47,483

Total Debt = $511.94 billion



14. Germany: 183.9%

Debt Per Person: $69,788

Total Debt = $5.674 trillion


15. Greece: 178.9%

Debt Per Person: $50,792

Total Debt = $546.92 billion


16. Spain: 169.5%

Debt Per Person: $50,868

Total Debt = $2.392 trillion


17. Australia: 139.9%

Debt Per Person: $58,322

Total Debt = $1.283 trillion


18. Italy: 136.6%

Debt Per Person: $40,724

Total Debt = $2.494 trillion


19. Hungary: 110.3%

Debt Per Person: $21,706

Total Debt = $216.16 billion


20. United States: 99.46%

Debt Per Person: $47,664

Total Debt =  $14.959 trillion


This report takes a look at the world’s top 20 largest economies that have the highest external debt-to-GDP ratio, calculated using the most recent numbers (Q3 2011) from the World Bank expressed in percentages.

External debt is a measure of a total debt in a country that is owed to creditors outside that country; foreign liabilities, capital plus interest that the government, institutions and people within a nation’s borders must eventually pay. In short, this number extends beyond simply government debt, but also debt owed by corporations and individuals.
  
Source: External debt information from The World Bank, GDP information from the CIA World Factbook.


Top 20 Serial Killers By Number Of Victims.


1. Luis Alfredo      

Proven Victims: 138
Possible Victims: 172-400+
Country: Garavito Colombia
Years Active: 1990s                                                                                               

Child-murderer, torture-killer, and rapist known as "La Bestia" ("The Beast"). Convicted of killing 138 victims but suspected of murdering over 400 victims, mostly street children. Sentenced to 1,853 years but could only be imprisoned for 30 which was reduced to 22 after aiding investigators.



2. Pedro Alonso López  


Proven Victims: 110
Possible Victims: 310 - 350+
Country: Colombia, Peru, Ecuador
Years Active: 1969 to 1980             
                    

Child-murderer and rapist, known as "The Monster of the Andes". Targeted young girls, between the ages of 8 and 12. Arrested in 1980 and convicted in 1983 of killing 110 young girls but confessed to killing 300, exact total unknown. Though he may be the most prolific serial killer of the 20th century, he was released in 1998. Current whereabouts unknown.



3. Daniel Barbosa  

Proven Victims: 72
Possible Victims: 150
Country: Colombia, Ecuador 
Years Active: 1974 to 1986
                                                                                                                                                    

Child-murderer, believed to have possibly raped and killed over 150 victims, primarily young virgin girls. Confessed to killing 72 victims and incarcerated with Pedro Alonso Lopez. Considered to be intelligent and believed to have been motivated to kill from his stepmother abusing him as a child. He strangled young girls in Colombia and was arrested, but he escaped from prison and he started killing in Ecuador; rearrested in 1989, he was killed in jail.



4. Pedro Rodrigues Filho

Proven Victims: 71

Possible Victims: 100+    

Country: Brazil 
Years Active: 1967 to 2003

Convicted and sentenced to 128 years, but the maximum one can serve in Brazil is 30 years. He has claimed to have killed over 100 victims, 47 of them inmates. He also killed his father and ate a piece of his heart. He killed his first two victims at the age of 14; he was first arrested in 1973.



5. Gary Ridgway

Proven Victims: 71
Possible Victims: 71–90+
Country: United States
Years Active: 1982 to 2000 

                                                                                                                                               
Truck painter who confessed to killing 71 women. The United States' most prolific serial killer; also known as The Green River Killer. He almost exclusively targeted escorts from Seattle. Once there, he would proposition a prostitute, drive to the banks of the Green River, and strangle her to death. After murdering his victim he would dump her body near the nearby water. Suspected of killing over 90 victims, confessed to 71, convicted of 48.



6. Yang Xinhai 

Proven Victims: 67
Possible Victims: 67
Country: China
Years Active: 2000 to 2003                                                                        

                                                                                
Would enter victims' homes at night and kill everyone with axes, meat cleavers, hammers, and shovels. Executed in February 2004. Known as the "Monster Killer".



7. Andrei Chikatilo

Proven Victims: 53
Possible Victims: 56 
Country: Soviet Union/Ukraine
Years Active: 1978 to 1990                                                                                                         

Known as Butcher of Rostov, The Red Ripper or The Rostov Ripper. Convicted of the murder of 53 women and children between 1978 and 1990. Executed in 1994. Three people were previously convicted and executed for his crimes.[7]



8. Anatoly Onoprienko

Proven Victims: 52
Possible Victims: 52+
Country: Soviet Union/Ukraine
Years Active: 1989 to 1996


Known as "The Beast of Ukraine", "The Terminator" and "Citizen O". Convicted of the murders of 9 people in 1989 and 43 people in 1995–1996. Sentenced to death, later commuted to life. Traveled through Europe illegally from 1990 to 1995; whether he killed during this time is unknown.



9. Alexander Pichushkin 

Proven Victims: 48 
Possible Victims: 61+ 
Country: Russia
Years Active: 1992 - 2006

Known as the Chessboard Killer. Convicted of murdering 48 victims and suspected of killing 61. Claimed to have murdered 63 people out of his goal of 64 to fill a chessboard; stated goal of becoming Russia's most prolific serial killer.


10. Ahmad Suradji 

Proven Victims: 42 
Possible Victims: 70–80+ 
Country: Indonesia
Years Active: 1986 to 1997


Convicted of strangling at least 42 women and girls in a series of ritual slayings he believed would give him magical powers. Executed by firing squad on 11 July 2008.



11. Moses Sithole

Proven Victims: 38 
Possible Victims: 38+ 
Country: South Africa
Years Active: 1994 to 1995

                                                          
Preyed on unemployed women, posing as a businessman and luring his victims with the prospects of a job, before leading them to an isolated place, where he raped, tortured, and murdered them. Sentenced to 2410 years imprisonment with a non-parole period of 930 years. Known as South Africa's Ted Bundy.



12. Serhiy Tkach 

Proven Victims:  36
Possible Victims: 80–100
Country: Soviet Union/Ukraine
Years Active: 1984 to 2005
                                              

A former Ukrainian police criminal investigator, suffocated girls aged between 8 and 18 and performed sexual acts on their bodies after they were dead. Claims to have killed 100.



13. Gennady Mikhasevich

Proven Victims: 36
Possible Victims: 38–43
Country: Soviet Union
Years Active: 1971 to 1985


Strangled females.



14. John Wayne Gacy

Proven Victims: 33
Possible Victims: 33
Country: United States
Years Active: 1972 to 1978


The "Killer Clown" who primarily preyed on young men and frequently raped his victims. He buried them under his Chicago home. Executed in 1994.



15. Vera Renczi

Proven Victims: 32
Possible Victims: 35
Country: Romania
Years Active: 1920 to 1930

                                                            
Convicted of killing 35 men through arsenic poisoning but confessed to only killing 32 victims.



16. Karl Denke

Proven Victims: 31
Possible Victims: 40+
Country: German Reich
Years Active: 1900 to 1924

                                                            
Cannibal mainly targeting travellers, probably striking them with an axe.


17. Ted Bundy

Proven Victims: 30
Possible Victims: 36+
Country: United States
Years Active: 1974 to 1978 

                                                           
America's first "post-modern" serial killer due to his charisma and good looks. Bundy officially confessed to 30 homicides, but he is suspected of at least 36, and upwards of 100 or more by some estimates. Infamous for escaping from prison twice and murdering multiple victims in one day, sometimes abducting women from the same location within hours of one another. He was executed in the electric chair in 1989.



18. H. H. Holmes 

Proven Victims: 27
Possible Victims: 200+
Country: United States
Years Active: 1886
                                               
Was one of the first documented American serial killers in the modern sense of the term. In Chicago, at the time of the 1893 World's Fair, Holmes opened a hotel, which he had designed and built for himself specifically with murder in mind, and which was the location of many of his murders.


19. Maoupa Cedric Maake

Proven Victims: 27
Possible Victims: 35+
Country: South Africa
Years Active: 1996 to 1997
            

Known as the "Wemmer Pan Killer" and "Hammer Killer". He killed his victims with different instruments such as: guns, rocks, a knife and a hammer. Authorities attributed the murders to two serial killers because of the Modus Operandi. In some cases he killed his victims with a rock, in others he shot them, and in others he murdered tailors with a hammer. Maake was arrested after Moses Sithole was found guilty of 38 killings and sentenced to 27 life sentences and 1159 years which amounted to 1,340 years all together.



20. Juan Vallejo Corona

Proven Victims: 25 
Possible Victims: 25+  
Country: United States
Years Active: 1971
          

Corona was convicted of murdering ranch laborers and burying them in orchards. He was sentenced to 25 terms of life imprisonment.


This part of the list contains all serial killers with at least 15 proven victims that acted alone and were neither medical professionals nor contract killers.