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First Selection Merit List announced for admissions in medical colleges of Punjab

First Selection Merit List announced for admissions in medical colleges of Punjab

University of Health Sciences (UHS) has announced the merit for admissions in the medical and dental colleges of Punjab, Dunya News reported on Monday. 

According to the announcement, the minimum merit for admission in MBBS has been 81.7727 while for BDS the minimum merit has been 81.6273. Adressing a press conference at the University of Health Sciences (UHS), the vice-chancellor of UHS Professor Mubasshir Malik said that 7303 candidates applied for the admissions while only 3017 would be able to admissions in 18 medical colleges. 

Merit for King Edward Medical University (KEMU) remained 87.20191 while it remained 85.4727 for Allama Iqbal Medical college (AIMC), 84.0909 for Services Institute of Medical Sciences (SIMS), 83.9182 for Fatima Jinnah Medical College (FJMC), 83.6273 for Nishter Medical College Multan, 83.1091 for Punjab Medical College Faisalabad, 83.0182 for Rawalpindi Medical College, 82.5909 for Quaid-e-Azam Medical College Bahawalpur, 82.4909 for Sargodha Medical College, 82.3182 for Nawaz Sharif Medical College Gujrat, 82.1636 for Shaikh Zaid Medical College Rahim Yar Khan, 81.7636 for De'Mont Morency College of Dentistry Lahore, 81.6727 for Nishter Institute of Dentistry Multan, 81.9545 for Sahiwal Medical College, 82.0545 for Gujranwala Medical College and 81.7727 for Dera Ghazi Khan Medical College. 

The vice-chancellor of UHS Professor Mubasshir Malik has said that the affiliations of those private medical colleges would be cancelled that started admissions before time and that admitted students with less than 60 percent marks.

Get invitation to Signup for Facebook Email account

Few days ago, Mark Zuckerberg, founder of social networking giant Facebook revealed the new email service from Facebook. The service, perceived as a direct rival to Google’s Gmail, marks a new front in the ongoing and increasingly bitter battle between Facebook and Google to gain the loyalty of users.


Now registration of Facebook mail service has been started by facebook and anyone on facebook can get a free Invitation.  

Visit: Sign-up for Facebook To Register for the the Email service. 

Before visiting sign-up page, its is recommended, you must read all the below past post of this blog for brief and starting information regarding this account.




Facebook email service to rival Gmail and Hotmail

Facebook Email ServiceFacebook email service to rival Gmail and hotmail after today when Facebook email service will be on air. Facebook email website will be expected on the same same domain so you can make email like this “faheem@facebook.com” and “james@facebook.com”. This gives a option for all the email users to get class 1 email addresses. So rush and get the best email addresses in 24 hours.

There is another possibility that facebook email service will be launched on some other domain like fbook.com or fbmail.com . In this case the email addresses will be like “faheem@fbook.com”. This is the same strategy Google opted by releasing Gmail.

Just wait today and you will get all the latest news about Facebook email service .

How to get invitation from Facebook email signup??

How to get invitation from Facebook email signup is now a big question.The answer is coming soon just wait 2 days...

Facebook email service through on sms messages

Another good point in facebook email service is that you can also use that if you dont have any gprs connection on your mobile phone that means you can send email through sms by using facebook email. Thats a mile stone as gmail , yahoo and hotmail is not providing any service like that. It will give facebook a new boost and edge over its competition.

Facebook email service through on sms messages includes both web to sms and sms to web features that means it will work as a connector between two worlds.

How to do is updating soon. keep visiting...

How to get Facebook email address?

Facebook is launching email service this week so the most important question in the mind of people is “How to get Facebook email address?” The answer is quite simple let Facebook launch email service and then signup to get new email address .

certain names are not allowed like Facebook , hotmail , admin , webmaster and gmail. Also the name taken by Facebook employees or departments are not allowed. By default Facebook recommends the name of your Facebook account. But you can change it to your desired one.

Its on first come first serve basis. So be quick to get your Facebook email address.

Error on Facebook email service

Following is the error coming on Facebook email service while sending or receiving email through facebook.

How to reset / change my password of Facebook email

How to reset / change my password of Facebook email is the question i am going to answer now. Its simple and is same like Facebook website.

Following is the step by step guide to reset or change my password of Facebook email.
  • coming soon..

Facebook calendar event organizing and sharing

With the Facebook email ,Facebook calendar also comes in the package. Following is the way to organize and share Facebook calendar.

Coming soon..

Facebook email security features

Facebook is now coming with more email security features as compare to gmail and hotmail. Now Facebook is the most secured email service provider on internet with the following security features.

Anti hacking..

How to download or send attachments in Facebook email

How to download or send attachments in Facebook email is the question on every user of Facebook mail service. Its as easy as 123 if you follow the following steps.

Setp1: coming soon..

Facebook email app for iphone / ipod

Facebook email app for iphone / ipod is free to download for all users. Now the Facebook email app for iphone / ipod is not powered by Facebook nor is a fully function app . But any one can download it from by clicking here.

coming soon..

Comparison between Facebook email, Yahoo mail, Gmail and Hotmail

Following is the comparison between  Facebook email, yahoo mail , Gmail and Hotmail .
  • layout
  • profile option
  • mail forward
  • check all other network emails on one network
  • Facebook integration.
  • Advertising

Live From The Facebook Event: We’ve Got Fmail!

Live From The Facebook Event: We’ve Got Fmail!


Watch live streaming video from facebookinnovations at livestream.com
Our definitive coverage so far:
We’re here at the Facebook Event at Yerba Buena Terrace, and Mark Zuckerberg has taken the stage to talk presumably Facebook’s new mail client, Project Titan. From what we hear this isn’t just an outgrowth of Facebook’s messaging feature, this will be a full on web client like Gmail except leveraging your social graph.
There’s been quite a lot of speculation since the invites went out last week on what this announcement would entail; Whether the general public would get POP and IMAP support, whether we should expect @facebook.com email addresses (or @fb.com) email addresses as well what exactly not being able to export your Facebook contacts to your Gmail and vice versa will mean  for users.
Stay tuned for updates and tune into the Livestream of the announcement, which starts at 10:00 am, above.
9:59 am — Mark Zuckerberg has taken the stage and reveals that they moved this event to SF because of Web 2.0 Expo.
10:01 — He’s now recounting a story about how talking to high school students about email he realized that “Email is too slow.” It’s not that email doesn’t get delivered immediately, it’s that it’s too formal because there’s all this extra stuff that gets attached to an email.
10:02 — Highschool kids don’t use email, they use SMS a lot. People want lighter weight things like SMS and IM to message each other.
10:03 — 350 million people messaging on Facebook, 4 billion messages sent each day and that’s growing at an alarming rate. The vast majority of this is messages between people.
10:06 — Zuckerberg bring up the idea of “Next Generation Messaging” which is seamless,informal, immediate, personal, simple, minimal, short. “You shouldn’t have to wade through a complex product.”
The three main elements of the product being announced today are:
1) Seamless Messaging
Communication across all the different ways people like to message, including but not limited to email.
2) Conversation History
A record of all your contacts with people all in one place.
3) Social Inbox
Social Inbox sound like the most important feature here with regards to personalization. “The real way to deal with spam and filtering is to build whitelists, but nobody wants to make lists. Your  default experience is personal messages for you.”
10:13 — Facebook Product Manager Andrew Bosworth has taken the stage and has brought up a slide of different devices, SMS, Messaging and email. While people will be getting a Facebook.com email address, Bosworth says that this product will not be just focused on email.
Bosworth announces an iPhone application — “People should share however they want to share, if you want to send me an email and want to get it as a text message, it should work.”
10:18 – Bosworth is getting into the Conversation History feature,“Individually these messages may not be profound, but collectively they had meaning.”
Bosworth is saying that in order to launch Fmail Facebook needed to completely rebuild their infrastructure, moving from Cassandra to hBase and extending their photo sharing application (Haystack) to support attachments.
This is the biggest engineering team (15 engineers) Facebook has ever put together for a product.
10:22 – Bosworth is now showing us the Social Inbox feature, which prioritizes messages from your contacts. Social Inbox will separate messages into three folders, Messages, Other, and Junk. Your social graph will determine what gets sorted in the messages folder.
10:25 – Zuckerberg is back onstage, “This is not a Gmail killer.” This is about messaging and not email. Our goal is to push email to seamless and simple messaging.”
10:28 — Facebook will be rolling out the feature starting today.
Q & A — We’re now getting into Q&A. First question “What does this not do that you want it to do?
Zuckerberg’s answer: “We wanted it to have IMAP support.” It currently doesn’t.
“We want people to not have to think about this stuff,” says Zuck.  He explains that person can trigger from the interface what device they want to send message for. “If you get a message and you’re online then you will get it through an IM.”
Bosworth jumps in “Our goal is to make this feel like a conversation.”
In response to a question about whether the product will integrate voice, Zuckerberg says that they are currently focusing on SMS, IM, Email and Facebook messages.
On how this will interact with Facebook ads, Zuckerberg says that nothing specific will change. On whether this will compete with Google, “This isn’t a Gmail killer, this is a Gigabox killer.”
“This product works fine with Gmail,” says Bozworth.
On the deletion of emails, users will have the ability to delete whatever messages they want.
Question from the audience: “Is this the biggest technical challenge for Facebook to date?”
Bosworth: “This was definitely a big challenge, don’t want to start a nerd fight by saying it was the biggest.”
Audience Question: “Right now I have conversations with people that are not on Facebook, what does that mean for my communications?”
Zuckerberg talks about the social design of the Social Inbox feature, that eventually if you keep emailing a contact the algorithm will adjust and bring those communications into the Messages folder.
Zuckerberg expects people to use the product as such, people will be checking their main folder Messages, repeatedly and the other two folders only occasionally.
On what Facebook employees will be using for email, “The farm bureau has agreed to give us FB.com and we in return have agreed to not sell Farm subsidies.”
Message forwarding will be enabled. You will also be able to add people and delete people to the thread. Bosworth dodged the question on size of storage space, and wrapped up the event asking us to email them @facebook.com. Wait, what?

Facebook Holding Yet Another Event Next Monday In San Francisco. Inbox Related?

Facebook Holding Yet Another Event Next Monday In San Francisco. Inbox Related?
MG Siegler
Nov 10, 2010
After a Summer spent in “Lockdown”, Facebook apparently got quite a bit of work done. They’ve already had a number of events just in the past few weeks. And now they’re having another one.

We’ve just been alerted about an invite-only press event taking place next Monday, November 15 at 9:30 AM in San Francisco. At the bottom of the invite, it notes that “This special event is in advance of Mark Zuckerberg’s conversation on 11/16 at Web 2.0 Summit.”
So what will Facebook be talking about? Who knows. The invite has chat bubbles on it, but as we’ve learned in the past, these often have nothing to do with the event.
After Facebook’s last event, in which they unveiled some big updates to their Places product including Deals, we asked Zuckerberg if the company had any other big things to launch this year. He indicated that more was on the way, but at least one more big thing was coming soon.
Is this the big thing or a smaller thing? Tune in Monday to find out.
Update: Actually, looking at their icon again, you’ll notice it is their Inbox icon (at least on the iPhone) and not their chat icon. Could this be the unveiling of the new Facebook mail product — Project Titan? Let the speculation begin!

Facebook: 350M People Using Messaging; More Than 4B Messages Sent Daily

Facebook: 350M People Using Messaging; More Than 4B Messages Sent Daily
Leena Rao
Nov 15, 2010
At Facebook’s messaging event today, Mark Zuckerberg revealed a few staggering statistics about the social network’s messaging platform. Zuckerberg said that 350 million members (out of over 500 million members) are using Facebook’s messaging system. So more than half of Facebook’s users are using its messaging platform.

He added that more than 4 billion messages are sent every day, and that number of growing at an alarming rate. Included in this stat are messages and instant messages using Chat. Zuckerberg said that the vast majority of messaging on the platform are one to one messages between two people.
With 350 million members using Facebook’s existing messaging system and 4 billion daily messages sent through the network, it’s no surprise that Facebook would want to own messaging as well as social interactions.
To put the 350 million statistic in context; comScore has reported that Gmail has 193.3 million users, Hotmail/Windows Live has 361.7 million users and and Yahoo Mail is used by 273.1 million users.

Facebook Acquired FB.com From The American Farm Bureau To Use Internally

Facebook Acquired FB.com From The American Farm Bureau To Use Internally
Leena Rao
Nov 15, 2010
It looks like Facebook did in fact acquire FB.com, according to CEO and founder Mark Zuckerberg. At the company’s messaging event today, he announced that Facebook bought FB.com from The American Farm Bureau. That organization points to FB.org. Zuckerberg adds that Facebook employees are using FB.com internally now and will have FB.com email addresses.

Zuckerberg told the audience: “The farm bureau has agreed to give us FB.com and we in return have agreed to not sell Farm subsidies.”
Last week, the site Domain Name Wire reported that Facebook had acquired the domain name. Facebook started appearing on the records of the registrar name for the domain, which MarkMonitor was handling (the service is used by many big-name clients to hide their domain transactions). AllFacebook had reported that Facebook was using fb.com.
And we’re reported on Friday that a Facebook employee was boasting that their email address would be getting significantly shorter next week.
It’s still unclear when Facebook bought the URL, but it was thought that FB.com sold to Facebook in September. And we’re also curious how much Facebook paid the American Farm Bureau for the domain.

Zuckerberg: Our System Is Not An Email Killer. But If It Dies As A Result…

Zuckerberg: Our System Is Not An Email Killer. But If It Dies As A Result…
MG Siegler
Nov 15, 2010
Today during the unveiling of their “modern messaging system“, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg had quite a bit to say about the rumored death of email with the coming of their product. “This is not an email killer. This is a messaging experience that includes email as one part of it,” Zuckerberg said.
Of course, he then went on to say that if in the future, Facebook’s system fundamentally alters the way people communicate and email is depreciated over time, that would be okay too. He said that in talking to current high schoolers (who make him feel “really old”) they don’t use email. “It’s too formal,” Zuckerberg noted.
Again, if you extrapolate that out, that means the end of email. It sounds as if Zuckerberg is just tip-toeing around calling for the death of a system that a lot of people currently use. Obviously, such a claim would cause a huge uproar (considering that there’s a huge uproar when Facebook changes a font size, the idea of Zuckerberg calling for the death of email is truly terrifying).
He also specifically talked about posts like ours calling this new system a “Gmail-killer“. “I think Gmail is a really good product,” Zuckerberg said. But again, he’s essentially saying that it’s a good product that future generations are using less and less.
He noted that email is too cumbersome. There’s a subject field, a formal greeting, a closing. Teens are using SMS and IM because it’s much simpler. And that’s what Facebook is trying to add to everyone’s life, using email as the gateway drug, of sorts.
We think that we should take features away from messaging. It should be minimal,” Zuckerberg said.
The writing is on the wall for email. Facebook just hopes it’s a Facebook Wall.

Facebook Vies To Become Your Homepage – And Why That’s A Big Deal

Facebook Vies To Become Your Homepage – And Why That’s A Big Deal
Robin Wauters
15 hours ago
It’s a very old trick, and arguably a mighty effective one. Ask people to set your website as their homepage, and it will become their entry point to the Web, the very first thing they’ll see when they open their browser. Venturebeat noticed that Facebook started prompting visitors to set the site as their homepage before the weekend, by means of a bar at the top that actually shows some pictures and names of your Facebook friends.
Others have reported to see the bar popping up as well, and reader Ryan Merket fromAppbistro just checked in to tell us that he’s seen it as well. You can see two other pop-up messages below, and you’ll notice that they differ from the one embedded above.
From the looks of it, Facebook is A/B testing this with a small subset of users, and trying out a variety of messages and pop-up layouts to figure out which one yields the best results.
This is undeniably a significant move, particularly when it will roll out to the site’s roughly 500 million active users in full. Keep in mind that Google and other search engines benefit greatly from being a genuine starting point to the rest of the Web, which is why so many people select such services to come up as soon as they open their Web browser.
Being people’s homepage is good for branding, great for ‘stickiness’ and phenomenal for traffic.
But for many people, social networking sites are slowly taking over at least part of the role of search engines, which is mainly to retrieve information. When you can tap your entire social graph for answers to your queries, sites like Facebook have the ability to push aside search engines like Google as the first site that springs to mind when people think about surfing the WWW to find information, connect to other people, communicate with friends, and so on.
I can easily see why more and more people would eventually switch to Facebook as their homepage of choice, and actively prompting them to do so might be just what some Facebook users need to actually configure their browsers to do just that.
Come to think of it, I’m wondering why Facebook hasn’t been doing this forever.
Facebook’s traffic is still very much not going anywhere but up, but the social network could still see a massive bump in total pageviews and time spent on the site if they can convince even just a tiny percentage of their total user base to set Facebook.com as their homepage.
That said, you’ve set TechCrunch as your homepage, right?

Between Gmail, Twitter And Now Facebook, There Is No Universal Inbox, Yet

Between Gmail, Twitter And Now Facebook, There Is No Universal Inbox, Yet
Alexia Tsotsis
1 hour ago
“Over the next five years every product vertical will be rethought to be social. Get on the bus”
– Mark Zuckerberg
Waking up and opening your laptop on Monday mornings has become a terrifying process. Between Gmail, Twitter, Yammer, Skype and Facebook and more it seems like hundreds of people known and unknown are trying to contact you at any given time. Information overload and fragmentation has gotten so bad that there was even a The Office episode spoofing the still outstanding need for a Universal Inbox (what they called WUPHF) for all your messages.
Prioritization of the deluge of information thrown at you is a huge problem, and one that currently only has imperfect solutions. Some set up an auto-reply declaring email bankruptcy, some do their best to train (when they can) their messaging system to prioritize and most of us just ignore everything but the most pressing stuff. Last Monday, Facebook announced its foray into messaging and took a unique stance on one of the most pressing problems of our time by taking the solution social.
Facebook VP of Product Chris Cox describes the philosophy behind Facebook’s attempt to use its concept of social design to leverage your social graph and get you the messages that matter most as such, “People have collaboratively built a network of who matters to them. We are living in a world where people are actually online. You’re not scared when you’re on a website and you interact with the people you know mainly.”
Yes there are countless ways to communicate online, but very few with built in restrictions. Adding Facebook’s hat toss to the pile, we’ve recently seen three novel attempts at dealing with information overload, each with advantages and disadvantages:
Gmail Priority Inbox
Gmail Priority Inbox is an example of a Whitelist solution. While the Priority Inbox algorithm theoretically sorts your email into only things you want to see, in order for it to work users must tweak a list of  Like and Don’t Like rules, you have to train Priority Inbox to recognize what is “Important” and “Everything Else” for you personally.
The problem with this is there is no one intelligible overarching filter, and the user ends up doing a lot of work. It takes me more time to flag my messages as “Unimportant” than it does to manually avoid junk mail so I get lazy about training which just leads to more junk mail.
Gmail’s greatest strength (openess) is also its downfall i.e. random emails from sexyfreeipod@hotmail.com. But, if your business depends on open communication and receiving messages from people you don’t yet know, then it currently is the most flexible of your message filtering options as it still allows for spontaneity but doesn’t throw you entirely to the spam wolves.
Twitter DMs
Many people say that Twitter DMs have become their most efficient mode of messaging thus far due to their size restrictions and incorporation of the Twitter follow social graph into who has or doesn’t have access to you. In fact, as a messaging service it currently is my favorite one to use — I consider my Direct Messages my inbox and my @replies a form of everything else/junk mail.
But anyone who’s ever tried to DM someone who is not following them will point out that Twitter is not without its flaws. In terms of a communication tool, Twitter fails in some ways because someone shouldn’t gave to subscribe to all your inane ramblings and mediocre Instagrams just so they can send you a private message. And at 175 million users it still doesn’t necessarily cover a wide enough segment of the population that it can be used by itself.
Facebook Messages
Facebook announced three new elements in their messaging system revamp on Monday: Seamless Messaging, Interoperable Messaging and Social Inbox. As it is currently in slow roll out, most users won’t understand the ins and outs of the first two features (and maybe even the third) until the product reaches critical mass (Imagine trying to explain the Facebook Newsfeed to someone who had not yet seen it).
While I don’t really care much for all my messages showing up in a thread and the idea receiving an email as a text sounds too much like WUPHF for my taste, I am psyched about Social Inbox’s potential.
Why? Well I almost never receive messages from humans, and that’s all I want to receive messages from, at least when I’m on Facebook. Affirming this, Cox says that the social design strategy behind Social Inbox’s creation it is an attempt to combine the algorithmic and White List filtering solutions with the knowledge inherent in your social graph, “It really is about the people.”
Social Inbox is split into three parts, Messages, Other and Junk. The two main parts Messages and Other are filtered by of whether people are Friends or Friends of Friends and everything else like pitches and newsletters. Think about it, you can give your @facebook.com email address to stuff like Groupon and only have to deal with those emails when you’re good and ready, no algorithmic training involved.
Like Gmail, the social graph that gives Social Inbox value also limits it, but there is something amazing about receiving an email from a friend sent from outside Facebook that shows up front and center in Facebook Messages prioritized by the fact that they’re your friend. If anything this cleans up the Facebook messaging system (Win). Now if only there was an easier way to cull your Friends list.
The revolution in social messaging will be specialized
None of the above options will necessarily kill each other, just like the existence of Yoga doesn’t kill the existence of Pilates as a form of exercise. No matter what the Contacts warslead us to believe, I won’t be trading in my Gmail for Facebook Messages anytime soon and I don’t think anyone expects me too. Besides, Mark Zuckerberg himself referred to Gmail Priority Inbox as “pretty cool.” Not exactly fighting words.
I’m pretty sure the 350 million active Facebook Messages users (most without the revamp),363 million Hotmail users, 303 million Yahoo Mail users, 175 million Twitter users and 171 million Gmail users all have some overlap, each using whatever service is most efficient in each particular use case.
Right now I wouldn’t Facebook message a potential client just like I wouldn’t @reply a relative with the details of what we’re doing for Thanksgiving. But this, like anything else in the volatile realm of human communication, is subject to change.
Image: 10ch
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Founded:September 7, 1998
IPO:August 19, 2004
Google provides search and advertising services, which together aim to organize and monetize the world’s information. In addition to its dominant search engine, it offers a plethora of online tools and platforms including:… Learn More
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Website:twitter.com
Location:San Francisco, California, United States
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Twitter, founded by Jack Dorsey, Biz Stone, and Evan Williams in March 2006 (launched publicly in July 2006), is a social networking and micro-blogging… Learn More
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Facebook is the world’s largest social network, with over 500 million users.
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