Arfa karim biography of mahatma
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People say i am a genius. I might be one but i am not the only one. There are many other Pakistani girls and boys like me. All those gems need, is a little bit of polishing. And I will do it. That's my aim.
Arfa Abdul Karim Randhawa was a Pakistani computer prodigy who became the youngest Microsoft Certified Professional in 2004. When she was 10, Randhawa was invited by Bill Gates to visit the Microsoft headquarters in the United States. She was submitted to the Guinness Book of World Records for her achievement. Randhawa kept the title until 2008 and went on to represent Pakistan on various international forums, including the TechEd Developers Conference. She received the President's Award for Pride of Performance by General Pervez Musharraf in 2005. A science park in Lahore, the Arfa Software Technology Park, was named in her honor. She died on 14 January 2012, aged 16, from a cardiac arrest.
Biography
Early life
Randhawa was born into a Punjabi Jat family from the vil
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Brief History
In pursuance of Rule 2(iii) of the Rules and Regulations of the Hospital the Chairman , Syed Wajid Ali, had nominated Syed Shahid Ali as the Chairman (designate) to take over the office as Chairman in the event of his demise. This was reaffirmed bygd the Members of the Managing Committee unanimously in a meeting held on April 20,2002., Syed Shahid Ali worked as Chairman of Managing Committee from April 2002 to June 2013.
On the resignation of Syed Shahid Ali, Mrs. Manzoor Ellahi was elected as Chairperson of the Managing Committee unanimously in a meeting of the Managing Committee held on 15.6.2013.
On the resignation of Mrs.Manzoor Ellahi ,Syed Shahid Ali was elected as chairman of Managing Committee unanimously in a meeting of managing Committee held on 12.06.2014.
Mr.N.A Haroon worked as Honorary Secretary of the Managing Committee from 1949 to 1964. 0n his death, Maulvi Karamatullah was unanimously elected as Honorary Secretary, to be followed in 1972 by Sh.Muham
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dideler/quotes.md
If you spend the next twenty years of your life, you could do something like a Michael Angelo painting, would it be worth it? Of course it would. It would be worth it for that one thing. For things to be worthwhile, they should be difficult.
For every power user that writes in asking for a feature, there’s one new user (and ten potential users) that felt the opposite way.
When you’re evaluating potential features, part of your role is to be an advocate for the long tail of users that won’t yet advocate for themselves.
Your users are experts at using your product, not building, supporting, or maintaining it.
Every feature added creates an implicit and perpetual contract with your users. A contract that obligates you to maintain, support, and build around that feature in every subsequent release.
Planning turns a chaotic mass of concerns into an organized sequence
— Martin E. P. Seligman
If it's not a hell yes! It's a hell no!
— Mel