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Donate Generously to help earthquake victims of Haiti

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We have seen many disasters struck a nation or a community and with every disasters the resolution of survivors become stronger and their faith in God becomes more. As Muslims our duty is to help those who are in need. This is the time to test our faith and donate generously to help the earthquake victims in Haiti. Since morning ever since the news hit the wire we have seen many nations, companies, relief organizations committing to help the earthquake victims. Help should be pouring in Haiti from all over the world but as individual we cannot just sit and watch on television, we have to get actively involved. Please help by donating generously. Donation can be made at your companies website, many companies will be matching your donation. You can also donate at Islamic Relief website. Islamic Relief has launched a drive to raise $1 Million to help the victims.


World's Fastest Scientist - Egypt-American Nobel Prize WInner

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World's Fastest Scientist
1/8/2010 - Science - Article Ref: SW1001-4033
Number of comments:
By: Andrew A. Sicree
Saudi Aramco World* -


Warm, late-afternoon sunlight streams through the window of a small room in the town of Desuq, in Egypt. The year is 1960, and a teenager studiously attacks a long list of math and chemistry problems. While he works, the voice of renowned Egyptian virtuoso Umm Kulthum filters from his family's radio. When one song ends, he turns the dial, searching station after station to catch another of her hour-long songs of longing, loss and love. He's good at cracking the math problems, and-rather than distracting him-Umm Kulthum's music makes long hours of study a joy and a pleasure.

The boy's parents have high hopes for his future. They've hung a sign on his door that says "Dr. Ahmed." And Ahmed Hassan Zewail will grow up to more than fulfill his family's hopes and expectations: In 1999, as a professor at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech), he will be awarded the Nobel Prize for Chemistry, becoming the first Egyptian-and the first Arab-to win a Nobel in a scientific field. And in 2009, his career will come full circle when he is named one of the first three "scientist-diplomats" in the United States' new Science Envoy program, aimed at forging scientific and technological partnerships in the Muslim world to help meet global challenges in health, energy, the environment and water and resource management.

The love of science and math and the love of Egyptian culture are interwoven throughout Zewail's life history. His 1946 birthplace was Damanhur, which, as he enjoys pointing out, lies between Alexandria and Rosetta, two cities noted for their importance to the world's intellectual heritage. The famous Rosetta Stone, which Jean-Fran ois Champollion used to decode ancient Egyptian hieroglyphic and demotic texts, was unearthed in Rosetta in 1799. And the renowned Library of Alexandria was the greatest library of ancient times, containing hundreds of thousands of papyrus scrolls. For Zewail these cities were more than aspects of local history; they were an inspiration to scholarship.

His growing-up in Desuq, a small town on the east bank of the Rosetta branch of the Nile, was a magical time for Zewail. He writes lovingly of his mother, Rawhia Dar, and father, Hassan Ahmed Zewail. His parents strongly supported his study of science and only lightly chastised him when he missed a point or two on a test at school. But in many ways, he notes in his autobiography, "we had a much bigger family-the people of Desuq. Families knew each other well, shared happy and difficult times, and valued interdependenceÉ." At dawn, Zewail and the other children of Desuq rose and went to study at the nearby Sidi Ibrahim al-Desuqi mosque-a place of learning as well as prayer.

Fascinated by how science and technology worked, Zewail, then a student, once used an Arab coffee-roaster to heat wood chips in a test tube in an attempt to produce wood gas. To test whether his experiment was succeeding, he applied a lit match to the output of his apparatus and nearly set his bedroom aflame. On another occasion, the young Zewail decided to take his uncle's car out for a spin. He'd never had a driving lesson, but he'd learned how a car operated-in theory. His drive along the banks of the Nile barely avoided a potentially fatal plunge into the river. Decades later, in 1999, when he was awarded Egypt's highest state honor, he remembered his days growing up along the Nile. Egypt has never been far from his thoughts.

Ahmed Zewail was appointed as a Science Envoy by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in November 3, 2009 which followed his appointment earlier in 2009 to President Obama's Council of Advisors on Science and Technology.

Zewail studied chemistry at the University of Alexandria and upon graduation in 1967 was appointed as a moeid, or demonstrator, at the university, teaching undergraduates while conducting his own graduate studies. One of the biggest decisions he made at this time was to leave Egypt in 1969 and go to America to pursue a Ph.D. at the University of Pennsylvania.

America presented Zewail with cultural and language challenges, but did not dim his vibrant optimism. Earning his Ph.D. in chemistry in 1974, he moved west to the University of California at Berkeley and then, in 1976, joined the faculty at Caltech, arriving with a raft of published scholarly papers in chemistry and physics to his credit.

At Caltech, Zewail proposed investigating what physicists and chemists call coherence; he contemplated experiments to study this phenomenon in single molecules as well as among billions of them. The difference between coherent and incoherent molecular vibration is akin to the difference between a marching band and a random crowd of people walking down the sidewalk: The feet of people in a crowd move in a random, incoherent manner; a marching band displays coherence when each musician moves his or her feet up and down in unison, in step with the music. If you know someone is in the marching band, then you can tell how that person's feet are moving by watching the whole band-you don't have to pick out the individual. Similarly, on the atomic level, you can study the vibrations of a molecule if it is part of a large group of coherently vibrating molecules. And if you know how molecules vibrate, you can begin to predict how they will react with each other-which is the essence of the science of chemistry.

The impact of Zewail's research was acknowledged when he was awarded a solo Nobel Prize. The Swedish Academy of Sciences noted that Zewail "brought about a revolution in chemistry" by enabling us to "see the movements of individual atoms."

Some of his chemistry colleagues argued that Zewail's experiments with coherence would never succeed. But he pushed ahead to do experiments that others thought theoretically impossible, perhaps because his youthful experience crashing his uncle's car had taught him the difference between theory and practice. Zewail's belief in coherence was justified in 1980 when he and his fellow researchers demonstrated coherent vibrations in isolated molecules of the hydrocarbon anthracene. This demonstrated the reality of coherence within molecules and put chemists on the road to using coherence to predict chemical behavior; it was his first major breakthrough.

Zewail wanted to see further. Although he'd never used a laser before coming to America, Zewail recognized that if you had a laser that produced very short pulses of light, you could use it to watch chemical reactions actually happening. To work, though, the pulses had to be extremely short-only a few femtoseconds in duration, a billion times shorter than had been achieved until then. At Bell Labs, Erich Ippen and Charles Shank developed the first femtosecond laser and Zewail integrated it into his apparatus.

The first chemical reaction that Zewail and his colleagues studied with the femtosecond laser apparatus was the breaking of a chemical bond. In late 1986, they aimed their femtosecond laser at the simple molecule iodine cyanide (ICN) and watched as the bond between the iodine atom and the carbon atom of the cyanide group stretched and then snapped. The bond broke "little by little, the first time such a thing had ever been witnessed in real time," Zewail wrote. This was his second major scientific breakthrough.

The impact of Zewail's research was acknowledged when he was awarded a solo Nobel Prize. The Swedish Academy of Sciences noted that Zewail "brought about a revolution in chemistry" by enabling us to "see the movements of individual atoms." The Nobel Prize committee recognized that Zewail's work allows us to "understand and predict important [chemical] reactions." Today, Zewail is the Linus Pauling Professor of Chemistry, professor of physics and director of the National Science Foundation Laboratory for Molecular Sciences at Caltech. He is widely respected as the founder of the field of femtochemistry and continues to build on the work that won him the Nobel Prize. Currently, he and his colleagues are developing techniques for four-dimensional (that is, the familiar three dimensions of space plus time), ultra-fast electron microscopy and diffraction. Among many other applications, these techniques will be used to study the folding of proteins and their misfolding, which appears to be involved in a number of diseases such as Alzheimer's and in some forms of obesity.

Seeing beyond the walls of his laboratory, Zewail frequently gives public lectures stressing the importance of fundamental scientific research. Although declining numbers of students choose to major in the sciences, he is optimistic that this decades-old trend can be reversed. With one foot in America and one in Egypt, he is perhaps uniquely situated to understand the difficulties faced by scientists in both countries. "I am an optimist," he says, and at every opportunity he speaks about the importance of the promotion of science and technology in developing countries. "Young scientists," he says, "shouldn't have to leave Egypt to dream big and to engage in frontier science and technological advancements." In Egypt, he has promoted the building of a new university of science and technology on the outskirts of Cairo. This new institution, he hopes, will grow to become Egypt's own Caltech.

One of the remarkable aspects of Zewail's autobiography, Voyage Through Time, is that it is replete with the names of hundreds of friends and acquaintances, ranging from Umm Ibrahim, the street vendor who sold him falafel sandwiches during his school days, to President Hosni Mubarak of Egypt. Over the years, he has worked with more than 300 scientists, graduate students, postdocs and other researchers-about 10 percent of them fellow Arabs-from around the globe. That collaboration will only grow with Zewail's appointment as a Science Envoy, announced by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in Morocco November 3, which followed his appointment earlier in 2009 to President Obama's Council of Advisors on Science and Technology. The Caltech professor called the assignment as a scientist-diplomat "a great honor," and added that, after years of researching the dynamics of chemical bonds, "I look forward to helping forge new bonds among nations."

Ahmed Zewail now lives and works half a world away from his Egyptian birthplace. He is both Egyptian and American. But the heat of the Egyptian sun still warms his personality and his heart is still brightened by the music of Umm Kulthum. In his office at Caltech, he still listens to CD recordings of her voice as he works on a new set of problems in science-and in the world.

 

Writer: Geochemist, mineralogist and science writer Andrew A. Sicree (sicree@verizon.net) teaches university geosciences and conducts research for mining, oil and gas industries. He lives and works near State College in central Pennsylvania.

Photographer: Nik Wheeler (www.nikwheeler.com) first worked for Aramco World and Saudi Aramco World in the 1970Õs, illustrating some 20 articles as well as special issues on Central Asia, China and the Silk Roads. His most recent book, The Most Beautiful Villages and Towns of the Southwest, is published by Thames and Hudson. He lives in Santa Barbara, California.

This article appeared on pages 12-15 of the January/February 2010 print edition of Saudi Aramco World.


A Muslim Serial Entrepreneur par Excellence

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Last night while surfing the web, came across a very inspiring article about a young Muslim Entrepreneur, Imran Hakim from UK whose iTeddy invention is an interactive teddy bear with a computer in its tummy. Hakim's iTeddy is an inventive educational toy designed to help kindergarten kids learn as they play. Children can download cartoons, stories and online tutorials for basic computer skills from a connected website. It equally has the ability to play MP3s or MP4s.

The article is very well written by a young freelance writer, Abdul-Lateef Balogun who is currently studying for his Master's degree at the Department of Geoinformatics, University of Technoloigy, Malaysia

To read more about iTeddy and Imran Hakim please click this link


1st Annual American Muslim Consumer Conference

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On October 31, 2009 the first American Muslim Consumer Conference (AMCC) was hosted at Rutgers University in New Jersey. It was well attended by entrepreneurs, professionals, advertising and marketing executives, academia and community leaders.

 

The American Muslim Consumer Conference provides the only platform for industry professionals to examine this potent market sector, and explore its rich potential. It effectively raises awareness of the Muslim consumer, their buying power so that the market can gain some visibility and presence in mainstream media, the advertising industry and also influence companies and entrepreneurs to develop products for Muslims.

 

It is clear that this market is growing and maturing. The consumer preferences of the world’s nearly 1.5 billion Muslims are faith-based, and largely non-negotiable, and the concept of Shariah-compliance as a marketing strategy has started to take root in the global and national marketplaces.

JWT’s 2007 study of ‘one of America’s biggest hidden niche markets’ revealed that the American Muslim consumers represent “a neglected market with huge potential for brands that are willing to connect with them.”

The report, based on face-to-face and telephone interviews, uncovered various important points about American Muslims attitudes to brands:

 

·         70% felt that brands play an important role in their purchasing decisions, compared to 55% for the average American

·         59% say they make a point of knowing which brands are popular, compared to a 42% average

·         55% felt that brands make ‘life more interesting’ compared to a 43% average.

·         71% said they rarely see anyone of their own faith or ethnicity in advertising

·         73% said they could not think of one mainstream brand that showed a Muslim in its advertising.

·         77% rated price as important, as against 91% of the general public, making their brand choice less dependent on price/value.

 

According to an article in Advertising Age, 'In the coming years, the U.S. market will likely begin to recognize and court the $170 billion purchasing power of American Muslims." In attendance for this year’s conference were key representatives from Wal-Mart, Sam’s Club and Campbell’s Soup.

 

Hosting AMCC was the MLink team’s idea. As organizer of this conference I have undertaken a responsibility to take an active stand and shape the discourse of American Muslims as a very important fabric in the economy of this country.

 

More details on AMCC can be found at www.AmericanMuslimConsumer.com

 

 


jolicloud new OS for Netbook

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Jolicloud is about to enter into Pre-Beta and we are dropping the invitations. We consider the product and its installation stable and simple enough for a broader release.

At Jolicloud, we believe people should be able to switch operating system on their netbooks. Like the adoption of Firefox made the web 2.0 possible, enabling users to switch OS will accelerate the growth and benefits of open cloud computing.

more about jolicloud.com

CEO JoliCloud is Tariq Krim and he is also the founder and former CEO of netvibes.com: More about him at
http://www.crunchbase.com/person/tariq-krim

His Blog:
http://www.tariqkrim.com/

 


Young Muslim changing poor childrens life

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I was delighted to come across Asher's presentation at TED India. I met Asher in summer of 2007 in New York City when he was working on the Naya Jeevan for Kids projects. Like all startup he was still putting his team together but I could see the passion in his eyes to help poor kids. I still remember him saying that in India and Pakistan, why is that a driver son becomes a driver and a maid daughter also becomes a maid. It is because we are not creating opportunities and environment for them to change their life. That is the idea behind Naya Jeevan for Kids. Offer poor childrens good health coverage so that they can develop, compete and grow.

NAYA JEEVAN is dedicated to rejuvenating the lives of low-income families throughout the emerging world by providing them with affordable access to quality, catastrophic healthcare.

Dr. Asher Hasan, MD, MBA: Asher is a 2009 member of the Clinton Global Initiative, a TED Fellow and a Draper Richards Social Entrepreneur Fellow for 2009-2011. In addition, Naya Jeevan and he are the recipients of a $75,000 1st prize in the 2008 NYU Social Entrepreneurship Business Plan Competition. Prior to launching Naya Jeevan, Dr. Hasan served in the capacity of Senior Director of the US Medical Affairs Obesity team for Amylin Pharmaceuticals, Inc. During his tenure in the biopharmaceutical industry, Dr. Hasan also completed a Masters in Business Administration (MBA) from New York University’s Stern School of Business.

Asher presenting at TED India


Accomplished Muslims

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I am always on the lookout to find about Muslims who are noted for their accomplishments either in Business, Media, Education, Finance and Social responsibility.

Recently came to know about two Muslims who are in the management team of Admob, a company which offers mobile advertising and is one of the world's largest mobile advertising networks, offering solutions for discovery, branding and monetization on the mobile web. Mobile devices are a critical media platform and Admob builds tools to let every business on earth leverage mobile. Recently AdMob was aquired by Google for a whopping $750 Million.

Omar Hamoui is the Founder & CEO of Admob and a member of the company's board of directors. He founded AdMob in January 2006 while in the MBA program at The Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania. Previously, Omar started and ran several companies in the mobile, Internet, and computer software industries including Vertical Blue, GoPix and fotochatter, a mobile to mobile image sharing network. Omar holds a BS in Computer Science from the University of California, Los Angeles and is on leave from The Wharton School.

Ali Diab is the Vice President of Product Management at AdMob, Ali is responsible for the company’s product strategy, roadmap, and business operations. Prior to joining AdMob, Ali co-founded and launched Ripple TV, the World's first geo-targeted and Web-enabled out-of-home TV network. Previously, Ali held senior and executive management positions at Microsoft, where he developed and launched services including MSN Messenger and MSN Mobile, and at Yahoo!, where he led teams behind services including Yahoo! Web Search, Yahoo! Mobile Search, Yahoo! Local Search and Yahoo! Maps. At Yahoo!, Ali was instrumental to the successful completion of several strategic company initiatives, including the Yahoo! Developer Network, the Yahoo! Geo-Tagging Service, the Yahoo! Location Targeting Service and the Yahoo! Search API. Ali was formerly Founder and CEO of BuildPoint.com, the World's first online marketplace for the building materials and construction industries. Ali is the author of nearly two dozen papers and patents in the data storage and information retrieval fields. Ali received his undergrad degree from Stanford University and an MBA and MPhil from Oxford University.

I am sure the accomplishments of Omar and Ali will inspire our young Muslim generations. Often Muslim Community do not take time to appreciate and recognize their efforts. We should make every effort to honor them in our community functions, ask them to be role model for our youths, ask them to give and share more.


Islamic/Muslim contributions in DC

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Salam,

On a recent trip to Washington DC I was pleasantly surprised to find many references to the contributions Muslims have made to civilization duly recognized in historic buildings.

1. Suleiman the Magnificient is represented in the House of Rep chamber

2. In the Library of Congress (largest library in the world), Islam is embodied and represented in the dome

3. Supreme Court Building. "The figure is a well intentioned attempt by the sculptor, Adolph Weinman, to honor Muhammad"


There are many more but this was a nice surprise to see!


500 Most Influential Muslims of the World

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It is a very interesting report published by Georgetown University of 500 most influential Muslims of the world. This comprehensive report shows the diverse nature of work Muslims are doing and how they are impacting the community.

The report can be downloded from here


Movers and shakers of the Muslim world. People who are influential as Muslims, that is, people whose influence is derived from their practice of Islam or from the fact that they are Muslim. We think that this gives valuable insight into the different ways that Muslims impact the world, and also shows the diversity of how people are living as Muslims today.


Movie about Prophet Mohammed (PBUH)

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Movie about Prophet Mohammed (PBUH)

Barrie Osborne, a Hollywood movie industry veteran of over 40 years whose credits include Lord of the Rings and The Matrix, has signed up as producer of the documentary epic.
"Barrie Osborne has agreed to produce the film and hopefully we should start to shoot in the first quarter of 2011," Raja Sharif, Alnoor's vice-president for international affairs, told AFP.
The film will respect Islamic traditions forbidding images of the prophet, so Mohammed(PBUH) himself "will not appear," Sharif said.
Qatar-based Sunni cleric Sheikh Yusuf Qaradawi, head of the Association of Muslim Scholars, will lead the research and serve as technical consultant on the project, Alnoor said.
Osborne said: "I am inspired by this opportunity to bring such epic entertainment to the world and excited by the chance to inspire and enlighten by bringing the story of one of history's greatest figures to audiences around the world."
Alnoor chairman Ahmed Al-Hashemi said: "There are more than 1.5 billion Muslims worldwide and Islam is the fastest growing religion in the world. The story of the Prophet has great contemporary relevance for Muslims and non-Muslims alike, and Alnoor is delighted to announce it as our first project."


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