Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Windows System Programming 4th edition by Jhonson m.hart



Windows System Programming (4th Edition)

Windows System Programming (4th Edition)
Windows System Programming (4th Edition
Publisher: Addison-Wesley Professional; 4 edition (February 26, 2010) | 656 pages | ISBN: 0321657748 | PDF | 10.3 MB

Windows System ProgrammingFourth Edition, now contains extensive new coverage of 64-bit programming, parallelism, multicore systems, and many other crucial topics.Johnson Hart’s robust code examples have been updated and streamlined throughout. They have been debugged and tested in both 32-bit and 64-bit versions, on single and multiprocessor systems, and under Windows 7, Vista, Server 2008, and Windows XP. To clarify program operation, sample programs are now illustrated with dozens of screenshots.


http://depositfiles.com/en/files/efpl99xaq

Thursday, September 2, 2010

PCB drops Butt, Asif, Amir from Pak squad

PCB drops Butt, Asif, Amir from Pak squad

PCB drops Butt, Asif, Amir from Pak squad

 Updated at: 1503 PST,  Thursday, September 02, 2010
PCB drops Butt, Asif, Amir from Pak squadTAUNTON: Tainted trio of Salman Butt, Mohammad Asif and Mohammad Amir have been dropped by the Pakistan Cricket Board from the limited-overs leg of the England tour, according to team manager Yawar Saeed.

Pakistan team manager Yawar Saeed said that new replacement players will be called in for the series.

The players accused of spot-fixing during the Lord's Test missed a practice game against Somerset in Taunton to meet with Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) and International Cricket Council (ICC) officials and senior diplomats.

Captain Salman Butt and bowlers Mohammad Amir and Mohammad Asif have been implicated in the scandal following a sting operation by British tabloid 'News of The World'.

Pakistan lost the four-Test series against England 1-3 last week at Lord's where the finale was overshadowed by the 'spot-fixing' scandal.

Salman Butt, Mohammad Asif and Mohammad Amir, the three Pakistan players who are at the centre of the spot-fixing controversy have been dropped; however, they had not, been suspended.

The three players are currently in London, where they are due to meet Pakistan's high commissioner to the UK. The PCB chairman, Ijaz Butt, is expected to be at that meeting.

Speaking in Taunton, where the Pakistan team are to play a warm-up match later on Thursday, Saeed said he had taken the decision, and also called for three replacements.

"The T20 squad will remain what it is here this morning, i.e. 13 people," Saeed said.

"When we play the one-day internationals we will be asking for replacements to make the squad up to 16."

The decision comes after several rounds of meetings between Ijaz Butt, ICC chief executive Haroon Lorgat and officials of the ECB, at which the PCB is believed to have been advised that the players should not take part in the rest of the tour.

Dont ban Pakistan: Taylor

Dont ban Pakistan: Taylor
 Updated :   Wednesday  September  1 , 2010  12:24:16 PM 
SYDNEY: Former Australian cricket captain Mark Taylor said Wednesday suspending Pakistan from international cricket over alleged match fixing would be "too harsh".

Taylor said it would be detrimental to cricket if an entire nation was banned because of the conduct of individuals.

"I don't agree with that, I think it's too harsh a penalty for one nation," Taylor said. "If they have one person, two people, three people involved in match-fixing or fixing certain deliveries ... to throw the whole nation? No, I'm not for that."

Taylor said banning Pakistan would not serve to lift the stain of match fixing from cricket.

"You're always going to ask those questions," he said. "(If) you throw them out, when they come back you're still going to ask those questions.

"I think all you can do is penalize the individuals and embark on an education process and hopefully stop people from doing this sort of thing, but I think throwing the nation out of world cricket I don't think is right."

Taylor said combatting match fixing was a major challenge, not just in cricket.

"(Match-fixing) is probably there in all sports," he said.

"You can not monitor people 24/7," he said. "It comes down to education and it comes down at the end of the day saying 'if you get involved in it, the repercussions are going to be damning'."

Earlier Wednesday, former New Zealand captain and ICC match referee John Reid joined calls for Pakistan's removal from world cricket.

Afridi struggling to lift morale after allegations

Afridi struggling to lift morale after allegations
 Updated :   Wednesday  September  1 , 2010  9:08:49 PM
TAUNTON: Pakistan one-day captain Shahid Afridi is struggling to lift the morale of his squad following the allegations of fixing against three of the players.

Afridi is captain for two Twenty20s and five one-day matches after taking over from Salman Butt —one of the three players returning to London to face an internal inquiry by Pakistani officials.

''Myself and the coach are trying to keep morale high,'' Afridi said Wednesday. ''It's always very difficult in these conditions against a good team but they are all really focused.

''What has happened has gone. We are here to play good cricket. It's a big challenge for me personally —playing in English conditions is always difficult.''

Afridi hopes that the remainder of Pakistan's tour of England will help the players get over the stress of the past few days, which have featured the newspaper allegations and the start of a police investigation.

''We are all looking forward to it,'' Afridi said. ''It has been really difficult but we can forget everything, get out, play the cricket and entertain the people.''

Pakistan plays its first Twenty20 against England on Sunday.

PCB replaces suspected trio for rest of tour

PCB replaces suspected trio for rest of tour
 Updated :   Thursday  September  2 , 2010  2:48:34 PM



TAUNTON, England: The three Pakistan players at the center of the fixing allegations dominating the team's tour of England will not play in the remaining Twenty20 and one-day international matches.

Team manager Yawar Saeed said Thursday that bowlers Mohammad Asif and Mohammad Amir and test captain Salman Butt have not been suspended but that they will not play in the remainder of the tour.

Saeed said that 13 players will be available for the two Twenty20 matches before three replacements arrive to bolster the squad for the five-match one-day series.

"The T20 squad will remain what it is here this morning, i.e. 13 people," Saeed said. "When we play the one-day internationals, we will be asking for replacements to make the squad up to 16."

Saeed, who had earlier said the trio would continue playing unless police laid criminal charges against them, did not say who the replacements would be.

Asif, Amir and Butt were at the Pakistan High Commission on Thursday for questioning by a Pakistan Cricket Board investigation.

British newspaper the News of the World alleged Sunday that Amir and Asif were paid to deliberately bowl no-balls in the opening day of the fourth test against England at Lord's last week.

Butt and wicketkeeper Kamran Akmal were also implicated in the story.

Asif, Amir and Butt had their mobile phones confiscated by police, who also searched hotel rooms and questioned players on Saturday as part of an investigation also involving the International Cricket Council's Anti-Corruption and Security Unit.

Asif ex-girlfriend gives match-fix evidence





Asif ex-girlfriend gives match-fix evidence
 Updated :   Thursday  September  2 , 2010  2:26:32 PM



ISLAMABAD: The former girlfriend of Pakistan fast bowler Mohammad Asif has met International Cricket Council officials investigating match fixing, after commenting on her suspicions of Asif's behavior.

Actress Veena Malik's manager Sohail Rashid on Thursday said she met ICC anti-corruption officials on Wednesday evening.

Ms. Malik had told Associated Press Television News that an Indian man frequently called and sent text messages to Asif, which she found suspicious.

Asif and fellow fast bowler Mohammad Amir are at the center of a match fixing controversy. Both were implicated in an alleged plan to deliberately bowl no-balls during the fourth test against England at Lord's.

کھلاڑی سب کچھ بھول کر ون ڈے سیریز پر توجہ دیں ،آفریدی

کھلاڑی سب کچھ بھول کر ون ڈے سیریز پر توجہ دیں ،آفریدی

کھلاڑی سب کچھ بھول کر ون ڈے سیریز پر توجہ دیں ،آفریدی


ٹاونٹن: اسپاٹ فکسنگ کے بھنورمیں پھنسی پاکستان کرکٹ ٹیم آج سمرسیٹ کے خلاف پریکٹس میچ کھیلے گی۔قومی ون ڈے ٹیم کے کپتان شاہد آفریدی کا کہنا ہے کہ اسپاٹ فکسنگ اسکینڈل کے الزامات کے بعد ٹیم کی کپتانی کرنا کسی چیلنج سے کم نہیں ہوگا۔ٹاونٹن میں میڈیا سے بات چیت کرتے ہوئے قومی ون ڈے اور ٹی ٹوئنٹی ٹیم کے کپتان شاہد آفریدی نے کہا کہ گزشتہ روز کھلاڑیوں نے بھر پور پریکٹس کی ہے اور ان کی نظریں انگلینڈ کے خلاف ٹی ٹوئنٹی میچ پر مرکوز ہے۔

ان کا کہنا تھا کہ قومی کھلاڑیوں پر اسپاٹ فکسنگ کے الزامات لگنا مایوس کن ہے لیکن اب تک کچھ ثابت نہیں ہوا ہے۔ شاہد آفریدی نے کہا کہ اس وقت پاکستان ٹیم مشکل وقت سے گزر رہی ہے اور ایسے موقع پر قومی ٹیم کی قیادت کرنا کسی چیلنج سے کم نہیں ہوگا۔ قومی ون ڈے ٹیم کے کپتان نے کہا کہ وہ کوچ وقار یونس کے ساتھ مل کر کھلاڑیوں کا مورال بلند کرنے کی کوشش کر رہے ہیں۔

آل راونڈر نے کہا کہ کھلاڑیوں کو واضح کردیا ہے کہ تمام باتوں کو بھول کر ون ڈے سیریز پر توجہ دیں۔ انہوں نے امید ظاہر کی سمرسیٹ کے خلاف پریکٹس میچ میں تمام کھلاڑی بہترین کارکردگی کا مظاہرہ کریں گے۔