Tuesday, January 8, 2008
System Of A Down - Lonely Day Lyrics
And its mine
The most loneliest day of my life
Such a lonely day
Should be banned
This day that I can't stand
The most loneliest day of my life
The most loneliest day of my life
Such a lonely day
Shouldn't exist
A day that Ill never miss
Such a lonely day
And its mine
The most loneliest day of my life
And if you go, I wanna go with you
And if you die, I wanna die with you
Take your hand and walk away
The most loneliest day of my life
The most loneliest day of my life
The most loneliest day of my life
Life
Such a lonely day
And its mine
A day that I'm glad I survived
Saturday, January 5, 2008
Stay out virus!! (UZA)
actually its a, some kind a spy ware , u can call it a virus.
” I used a pen drive last. next time when I opened my computer, its boot screen was changed as picture shown.”
Many of my friends are victim of this UZA
what it do is, Disabling Display Properties Task bar and it also changes the boot screen logo.
Solution:
what u need to do is delete some Registry Keys
here we go
hklm\software\Microsoft\windowsNT\currentversion\winlogon\
delete “IgnoreShiftOveride”
hkcu\software\microsoft\windows\currentversion\policies\system\
delete all hives under system, but default.
So now you can open Taskmanager use shortcut Ctrl Alt and Del
select Process Tab
From there you can find UOS.EXE .end process that one
Go to C:\Windows\System
Delete UOS.EXE
Ok Now is to change boot logo.
okay go to System properties from control panel or use the easy way (press windows button and Pause Break from the keyboard.)
okay select the Advance tab
under the startup and Recovery go to settings
Now find a Edit button
Now it will take you to the boot.ini
here is the Default file.
[boot loader]
timeout=30
default=multi(0)disk(0)rdisk(0)partition(1)\WINDOWS
[operating systems]
multi(0)disk(0)rdisk(0)partition(1)\WINDOWS=”Microsoft Windows XP Professional” /noexecute=optin /fastdetect
so delete any thing comes after fastdetect
Okay now the last thing , to change the UZA O/S near the system clock.. right?
change this keys from Registry
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Control Panel\International\
“sTimeFormat”=”h:mm:ss tt”
and delete these dll’s from the directry
C:\Windows\system32\
DPP(1).dll,DPP(2).dll,DPP(3).dll,DPP(4).dll,DPP(5).dll,DPP(6).dll,DPP(7).dll,DPP(8).dll,DPP(9).dll
DPP(10).dll
C:\Windows\system32\VisLoader.exe
C:\Windows\boot.bmp
C:\Windows\system32\PWallpaper.jpg
so now its time to say bye to uza operating system right!
Friday, January 4, 2008
Dear Lord

Dear Lord, as I close the door on this old year,
I ponder on the things I've done...
on the things I've said and the joys I've had...
then I wonder, have I lost or won?
I've thought of the new friends I have made,
and of the old ones staunch and true...
the path of the old year was made easier Lord,
because I have walked it with You.
I think of all the many times,
when my burdens were so heavy to bear,
and how my faith slipped away from me...
but somehow You were always standing there.
Now as I open the door to this New Year,
and carefully peep inside,
I wonder what it holds for me...
but I'll throw the door open wide
And whatever it brings to me and mine,
I'll meet it with a heart so true...
I know that, Lord whatever it may be
You'll be there to carry me through.
Tuesday, August 21, 2007
Hollywood and HRSA Work Together to Help Writers Get Stories Right

A young patient enters a hospital emergency room with vague abdominal pain. Almost immediately the ailment is diagnosed and the need for an organ transplant is determined. The patient hovers near death, an organ suddenly is found, and a full recovery occurs – all within the span of a one-hour TV show... it’s good entertainment, but is it true to life?
That’s the dilemma that HRSA and other federal health officials try to resolve through a cooperative agreement with Hollywood, Health & Society (HH&S), a project of the University of Southern California’s Annenberg Norman Lear Center. HH&S links public health officials and medical experts to entertainment industry writers and producers in an effort to make sure health-based TV dramas use accurate and up-to-date information.
“The arrangement offers HRSA a chance to correct misinformation before it reaches tens of millions of TV viewers and an opportunity to advance important organ donation messages,” said Joyce Somsak, Associate Administrator for Healthcare Systems.
The agreement reflects the entertainment industry’s pervasive influence in the way the public learns about vital health issues. According to a 2001 Health-Styles survey conducted by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), more than half of regular prime time and daytime drama viewers said they learned something about a disease or how to prevent it from a TV show. About a third of regular viewers said they took some action after hearing about a health issue or disease on a TV show.
And that’s a problem when the truth about a health issue may not be as entertaining as fiction. If fictional television shows are a major way the public learns about health, misinformation could lead to adverse health outcomes.
HRSA officials’ main interaction with HH&S has been in the very dramatic issue of organ donation, since alarmist – and incorrect – episodes about body snatching or organ harvesting could diminish public support for donation. In several shows dealing with organ donation, HRSA officials have given HH&S accurate information about the donation process and identified other experts whom screenwriters can talk to on donation-related topics. Jim Burdick, M.D., Director of the Division of Transplantation in HRSA’s Healthcare System Bureau and a transplant surgeon himself, often has served as an expert consultant to HH&S.
The recent primetime TV dramas the Division of Transplantation staff has consulted with HH&S on include: ER, House, Grey’s Anatomy, CSI Miami, Numb3rs, and Medium. They also have provided valuable health education information to soap operas such as All My Children, General Hospital, One Life to Live and The Young & The Restless.
Besides HRSA, HH&S receives support from other HHS agencies: CDC, the NIH, and the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. HRSA’s participation in the cooperative agreement began in FY 2005.
HRSA’s decision to work with HH&S occurred at the same time an agency-supported study by Purdue University monitoring media portrayal of organ donation found the public held these erroneous beliefs:
- Between 50 percent and 80 percent of people believe there is a black market for organs in the United States. The truth is there is no black market.
- About 50 percent of respondents believe that it is possible to recover from brain death. The truth? Unlike coma, no one recovers from brain death.
- About 75 percent believe that the medical and organ allocation system can’t be trusted to be fair. In reality, the U.S. transplant system operates by very specific policies with oversight from HRSA.
- About 14 percent of people fear that they won’t be saved or that doctors will take their organs before they are dead. The truth: Nothing could be further from the truth. The team trying to save an individual’s life has only one goal, to save the person’s life. The transplant team is totally separate from the medical team and is called in only after all life-saving measures have been exhausted.
