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Sabrang Digest was founded on January 1, 1970 by Shakeel Adilzada.The earliest editorial team included Shafique Hassan (editor-in-chief), Shakeel Adilzada (editor), and Hassan Hashmi (associate editor).
Ilyas Sitapuri (30 October 1934 – 1 October 2003) was a Pakistani historical fiction writer. He is known for writing historical stories for Sabrang Digest and Suspense Digest.
WikiTaxi is an offline-reader for wikis in MediaWiki format. It enables users to search and browse popular wikis like Wikipedia, Wikiquote, or WikiNews, without being connected to the Internet. WikiTaxi works well with different languages like English, German, Turkish, and others but has a problem with right-to-left language scripts.
Offline news readers using NNTP are similar, but the messages are organized into news groups. Most e-mail protocols, like the common POP 3 and IMAP 4 used for internet mail, need be on-line only during message transfer; the same applies to the NNTP protocol used by Usenet (Network news).
Court piece (also known as Hokm (Persian: حکم), Rung (Urdu: رنگ) and Rang) [1] is a trick-taking card game similar to the card game whist in which eldest hand makes trumps after the first five cards have been dealt, and trick-play is typically stopped after one party has won seven tricks. A bonus is awarded if one party wins the first ...
Choudhri Mohammed Naim (born 3 June 1936) is an American scholar of Urdu language and literature. He is currently professor emeritus at the University of Chicago. Naim is the founding editor of both Annual of Urdu Studies and Mahfil (now Journal of South Asian Literature), as well as the author of the definitive textbook for Urdu pedagogy in English.
WikiReader was a project to deliver an offline, text-only version of Wikipedia on a mobile device. [1] The project was sponsored by Openmoko and made by Pandigital, and its source code has been released. [2] The project debuted an offline portable reader for Wikipedia in October 2009. [1]
Raz is noted for repeatedly playing with the Urdu word aa'ina [mirror in English] in his poetry, and integrating it into his work in different ways. Poet and reviewer Afsar Mahpuri notes in his article, "Rafiuddin Raaz – A dreaming poet," the "focal position and importance" that the mirror has been awarded over time, and presents the following partial list of couplets, containing the word aa ...