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Monday, March 25, 2013

Pond’s Femina Miss India 2013


Navneet Kaur Dhillon was Sunday night crowned Femina Miss India 2013 in a star studded grand finale of the 50th edition of the beauty pageant. The first and second runners-up were Sobhita Dhulipala and Zoya Afroz respectively. The trio was selected from 23 finalists from across the country.
Actresses Aishwarya Rai Bachchan and Priyanka Chopra added Bollywood glamour to the ceremony, which was judged by filmmaker Karan Johar, choreographer Shiamak Dawar, cricketer Yuvraj Singh, fashion designer Ritu Kumar, actors John Abraham, Asin Thottumkal and Chitrangda Singh. (Text - IANS)
Earlier, in a night of glitz and glamour, 21 awards were presented to Miss India hopefuls. These awards included Miss Fashion Icon, Miss Ramp Walk, Miss Stylish Hair, Miss Congeniality, Miss Active, Miss Photogenic and Miss Eyeconic Eyes. Here's a look at the 23 Pond's Femina Miss India hopefuls and winners.

India Thrash Australia

NEW DELHI: History was made at the Feroz Shah Kotla on Sunday as India wrapped up their first-ever 4-0 series win over any opposition with a six-wicket verdict against Australia.
Set a presumably challenging 155 to win on a disintegrating third-day pitch, the chase was guided to perfection by Cheteshwar Pujara's 92-ball, unbeaten 82 as the target was realised in a shade above 31 overs.
Pujara's brilliance made sure that Ravindra Jadeja's maiden five-wicket haul, which had shot out Australia for 164 in their second innings, was not allowed to go in vain. For, after Murali Vijay (11) was bowled trying to reverse-sweep off-spinner Glenn Maxwell, India stuttered momentarily.
Virat Kohli (41), Sachin Tendulkar (1) and Ajinkya Rahane (1) got out within five runs of each other and MS Dhoni was dropped by wicket-keeper Mathew Wade off Nathan Lyon before he had opened his account. It is in the light of this minor batting collapse that Pujara’s sparkling half-century attains a new luminescence.

The Saurashtra batsman procured his runs at a fair clip, stroking eleven boundaries, not once allowing the pressure to build on a dicey wicket. Victory was attained when Dhoni, like he has so many time in his career, swung Lyon to the fence.

Jadeja was named Man of the Match for his first innings 43 and seven wickets, while Ashwin was declared Man of the Series for scalping 29 Australians across four Tests. Not since Harbhajan Singh against the same opposition in 2001 has an Indian bowler gained such a rich haul in a series.
Spun out 
It was indeed Jadeja’s left-arm spin that catalysed the match to a premature end. The 24-year-old was, in conjunction with Kohli, involved in several verbal duels with the opposing batsmen as Australia collapsed to 53/5 in their second innings. Jadeja dismissed the openers David Warner and Maxwell – the former accorded a colourful send-off – and also removed a resistant Ed Cowan (pushed down to No.3)  with a sharp turner that spat from the surface.

Phil Hughes was adjudged ‘lbw’ – a little harshly – and Shane Watson exited to a pull botched on account of low bounce.

It took another Peter Siddle special to bolster Australia. The fast bowler scored his second fifty of the match to become the only No.9 batsmen in history to top-score in both innings of a Test. Siddle struck seven sweet boundaries in his 45-ball 50, adding 28 and 35 for wickets eight and nine.
Quick end
The efflux continued unabated at the other end. Steve Smith did not offer a shot to Jadeja and was bowled; Wade looked distinctly uncomfortable during his 38-ball stay before he was caught smartly by a diving Dhoni off Ashwin.
Siddle was the last man out when he was stumped off an Ashwin wide, setting India a target of 155. Visions of an unlikely triumph to close what has been a horrid tour would have flashed through Aussie minds, but their spinners were unable to draw similar purchase from the pitch as had India's.
Pujara’s brilliance at the top of the order then made certain that India's almost picture-perfect series did not suffer the eruption of a few nagging zits.

Saturday, March 9, 2013

Cool, clever and just odd products featured at the International Home and Housewares Show

A mug that floats. A bag-free vacuum that compresses dirt into "bales" so you don't get a face full of dust when you empty it. A window garden that never needs tending.
The recent International Home and Housewares Show in Chicago featured all sorts of innovative and just plain odd products, any of which could be poised to hit the big time. Can you envision any of these in your home?
Spaces' Ilyce Glink was at the show; read her coverage in our post on the robots that are taking over our world, or at least cleaning it: the window-cleaning Winbot, the barbecue-cleaning Grillbot and the gutter-cleaning Looj.



The Floating Mug by Tigere Chiriga. 
Moisture ring stains on the table? Not anymore. The porcelain Floating Mug incorporates a coaster into its design, catching slight moisture in the little dish where the handle ends. The brainchild of Tigere Chiriga (and his wife's complaints about ring stains), it launched on Kickstarter last year. It's now available for preorder online at FloatingMug.com for $36.

[Note: I deleted a phrase above and added the following paragraph to address comments about the mug design. Yes, I do read the comments! Right after I put on my ego armor.] Skeptics and naysayers might say -- indeed, do say in the comments on this very post -- that the collected moisture would spill on you as soon as you take a sip. My fault! I said earlier that the bottom dish catches moisture, but in fact, the disc seems to simply elevate the mug so that tiny drips slide under the mug to evaporate. Here's Chiriga's Kickstarter explanation to another critic's misapprehension last year: "In my experience, some sips result in a very small drop or two sliding down the side of the mug. Sometimes that amount will evaporate well before it makes it to the bottom of the mug; other times, it's enough to make it to the base of the mug creating a ring on your coffee table." As he says: "If I spill enough coffee that a pool of it collects on the coaster, then my wife is going to be giving me a sippy cup." (P.S. Alas, I can't address commenters' complaints about the mug cost. I can only point out that products often cost more at launch. If the products are lucky enough to go into mass production and sell well, the price often comes down.)


The Gtech AirRam Cordless Vacuum Cleaner.The dirt is compressed into bales, not whirled in a vacuum bag to be released in a cloud of dust in your face."Is this the best vacuum cleaner ever?" That's what the U.K. Daily Mail asked about the Gtech AirRam Cordless Vacuum, ultimately rating it a 10 out of 10.
It weighs only about 7 pounds, it can fit into spaces as shallow as 3 inches high and -- my favorite part -- it doesn't have a bag or "cyclone" action. Instead, it compresses debris into bricks or, as the manufacturer calls them, bales. No dust cloud! It's available in the States at Brookstone for $350; visit the Brookstone link to see a video of the vacuum in action.



The Click and Grow garden.The Click and Grow garden needs virtually no tending -- great for the black thumbs among us who love plants but can't seem to get greenery to stay green. The two-part system works "just like a printer and toner": A "smart" flowerpot contains electronics and a water pump and reservoir; the plant cartridge contains seeds, nutrients and software. All you do is pop in four AA batteries, fill the reservoir with water, and place the kit in good light. If the reservoir needs water -- as it does every month or two -- you'll see a blue light blink. After about a year, a red light will indicate that the batteries need changing.
A starter kit with smart flowerpot and cartridge is $79. Refill cartridges are $20. Cheap? No. But if it's really as foolproof as it seems to be, maybe the price is worth it. After all, the founder was inspired by research that says the world throws away more than $20 billion in houseplants every year because people don't tend them properly.



The Shopping List Bag, $11.Every time. Every single time I go to the store, I forget to bring a reusable bag, even though I shop places where disposable bags are banned or cost extra. But I don't (usually) forget the shopping list on the refrigerator. The Shopping List Bag combines the two, with magnets that attach the list and the folded bag to your fridge. When you're ready to go, you tuck the list notepad into the bag's pocket. It also has clips for store reward cards and coupons. Find it on ShoppingListBag.com for $11 (warning to those who follow the link: a product video auto-plays).

Electric fireplace heaters from Crane.This last item is one of those so-kitschy-it-hurts designs: a "fireplace" you can carry around from one room to the next. The portable electric space heater mimics the look of embers yet stays cool to the touch (and if you like, you can leave the ambient glow on without the heat). It's 15 inches high and 12 inches wide. Buy it for $90 from Crane, a company you might know as the maker of those adorable humidifiers.

Time to spring forward: Five facts about daylight saving time

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Here's everything you wanted to know about the time change this weekend.
When is it?
The time change begins on Sunday, March 10, at 2 a.m., when clocks are moved forward by one hour.
Why 2 a.m.?
The time change is set for 2 a.m. because it was decided to be the least disruptive time of day. Moving time forward or back an hour at that time doesn’t change the date, which avoids confusion, and most people are asleep, or if people do work on a Sunday, it’s usually later than 2 a.m.
Do all states observe daylight saving time?
Hawaii and most of Arizona don’t observe the time change. U.S. territories that don’t go on daylight saving time include American Samoa, Guam, Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands.
Why do we have it?
The idea is to save electricity because there are more hours of natural light. Studies have shown the savings to be fairly nominal—the time change leading people to switch on the lights earlier in the morning instead or cranking up the air conditioning, for example.
What is the history of daylight saving time?
Fun fact: The idea was first floated in 1784 by one Benjamin Franklin. While minister of France, he wrote the essay "An Economical Project for Diminishing the Cost of Light."
The idea failed to see the light of day until 1883, when the U.S. railroads instituted a standardized time for their train schedules. That time change was imposed nationally during the First World War to conserve energy, but it was repealed after the war. It became the national time again during World War II.
After that, it was up to the states to decide if they wanted it, and when it would start and end. Congress finally enacted the Uniform Time Act in 1966, which standardized the beginning and end of daylight time for the states that observed it. In 1974 and 1975, the energy crisis moved Congress to enact earlier daylight start times, which were reversed when the crisis was over.
Daylight saving time since then had always been in April—until the Energy Policy Act of 2005 ordered the earlier start time to begin in March 2007.

Most Frugal Celebrities

We aren't the only ones to use coupons. Some of Hollywood's A-listers regularly look for discount deals and practice money-saving habits.
Coupons.com compiled a list of penny-pinching celebrities, and we've added a few of our own.
From stars who clip coupons to those who bargain buy, here are the celebrities who know how to stretch a dollar.
1. Kristen Bell uses coupons while she grocery shops.
The "House of Lies" star admitted on "Conan" that she's very frugal.
“I use a lot of coupons," Bell told late-night host Conan O'Brien. "The best coupon you can get, possibly in the world, is the Bed Bath & Beyond coupon.”
2. Jay Leno doesn't spend any of the money he earns from "The Tonight Show."
 
Gas and ElectricThe late-night host revealed in a Parade column that he only spends money from comedy routines.
"When I was a kid, I had two jobs," wrote Leno. "I worked at a Ford dealership and at a McDonald’s. I’d spend the money from one job and save the money from the other. That’s still the way I am now. I live on the money I make as a comedian, and I put all the TV money in the bank. I’ve never spent a dime of TV money—ever."
3. Singer Carrie Underwood clips coupons for weekly shopping.
While taking Everyday with Rachael Ray through a day in her life, Underwood shared that despite forgetting coupons sometimes, she does make a habit to cut them out.
"Doing the weekly shopping, I stock up on stir-fry kits, Amy's meatless burgers, and armloads of onions and garlic. I put onions and garlic in everything. Ack—as usual, I forgot my coupons. (Yes, I do clip them!)," shared Underwood.
4. "Mad Men" star Vincent Kartheiser lives in a one-bedroom Hollywood apartment and takes public transportation.
The "Mad Men" actor told The New York Times in 2010 he prefers to travel mass transit as opposed to a car.
“It’s wonderful,” said Kartheiser. “Instead of driving and being stressed out about traffic, you can work your scene, you can do your exercises or whatever on the bus."
5. Sarah Michelle Gellar shops the sales at the grocery store.
 
The actress told Self magazine she and husband Freddie Prinze Jr. see no need to buy items full price.
"We shop at Whole Foods, but we ask which fish is on sale," said Gellar. "On sale doesn't mean it's bad! It probably just means it's overcaught. And I clip coupons all the time. Why should you pay more for something that someone else is paying less for?"
6. Despite being one of the richest supermodels in the world, Tyra Banks relishes in saving.
 
Pizzello“I am frugal. I’ve always been this way," Banks told The New York Times. "When I was young, my mom would give me my allowance, and I’d peel off a little each week and have some to spare.”
7. Actress Jennie Garth purchases new clothing to complement her daughters' existing wardrobes.
Garth told Access Hollywood when it's time for a new school year, she'll try to save money by finding ways to reinvent her kids' old attire.
"We usually buy new things that can be mixed and matched with their existing wardrobe," said Garth. "Back-to-school is a great time to clean out their closets, and anything outgrown we donate or [sell]."
8. "Law & Order" actress Mariska Hargitay is always saving up money because of her poor upbringing.
One of television's highest-paid TV stars told MORE she always has money on the brain.
“I make a lot now, but I don’t feel that way, because I was poor and had no money for a lot longer than I’ve had it," said Hargitay. "As an actor, if this show ends next year, then what? As an aging woman, then what? I’m saving money to live on, for the future. There are not that many roles for women, and I’ve been blessed with one of the great ones.”
9. Sarah Jessica Parker's son James wears hand-me-downs.
The "Sex and the City" star told told Parade Magazine she refuses to spoil her son remembering she grew up with a family of eight on welfare.
"[My son] only wears hand-me-downs because I've got all these older nephews," said Parker. "I think it's incumbent on my husband and me to really stress and to show James Wilkie by example what it means to owe your community something and that he is not entitled to the benefits of our hard work."
10. "Twilight" actress Ashley Greene takes pointers on cash-crunching from her dad.
The actress told Marie Claire that just because she was in the successful "Twilight" franchise it doesn't mean the fame has gone to her head.
"I'm lucky because my dad taught me to be frugal and save," said Greene. "And that's important because I want to know that I don't have to take an acting job for two or three years if I don't want to and that I'll still be able to make my house and car payments and buy food for my dogs.”
11. Megastar Lady Gaga has also told her fans she uses coupons while shopping for groceries.
 
Mother Monster tweeted to her followers in December about her bargain buys: "Why do people look at me like I'm crazy when I use coupons at grocery (stores) or try bargaining at retail, IM FROM NEW YORK WHERE IS THE SALE RACK."
12. Zooey Deschanel's finances revealed the actress doesn't splurge on clothes and extras.
 
One of the most money-conscious stars is Zooey Deschanel.
After the "New Girl" actress and ex-husband Ben Gibbard split last year, her finances were revealed in court documents obtained by TMZ.
Per month, the actress, who was worth nearly $3 million last January, will spend $2,000 on clothes, $800 in utilities, and $300 for phone and email. She even donates $1,500 a month to charity.

Dropouts who became Millionaires

When it comes to success, all you need is sheer will and perseverance. Let’s take a leaf out of these millionaires’ books and see if success really needs a college degree.
1. Walt Disney
The maker of the adorable Mickey Mouse dropped out of school at the age of 16 and went on to become the most fascinating and well-known film producers of the world. With an average of 3 Disney films produced every year, the Walt Disney Company earns annual revenue of a whopping USD 35 billion. 
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2. Henry Ford
Do you own a Ford car? If yes, then you’d be pleased to know that its founder Henry Ford was a dropout as well. He ran away from home at the age of 17 and began his career as an apprentice in a garage. Today, with a multi-billion dollar company, Henry Ford is one of the richest people in the world. 
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3. Milton Hershey
Milton Hershey went on to become one of the most loved chocolate makers, with education only till the fourth grade. Now with his internationally marketed chocolate, one hardly associates his success to education. 
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4. Michael Dell
With the most popular PCs ever created, Michael Dell hardly needed a computer science degree to sire his computer-empire. A university drop out at the age of 19, he left education to run what would later become the largest manufacturer and sellers of PCs and servers. With a whopping $57 billion 
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5. Steve Jobs
Everyone owes their modern computing experience to Steve Jobs. Not only did he pioneer the most well known computing system in the world, Apple Computers, but also was the first person to initiate the graphical user interface featuring a mouse and an image screen. He did all of this with just a 
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6. Bill Gates 
In spite of being a college dropout, Bill Gates is one of Forbes’ Richest People in the world. His multinational company, Microsoft Corporation, is the largest computer software manufacturers in the world, earning an average annual turnover of more than USD 51 billion. work 
7. Woody Allen  
The multifaceted artist is an actor, director, writer, musician, playwright and comedian and is considered to be one of the foremost cinematic pioneers of the modern era. Having dropped out of college because of poor grades, he now belts out an award-winning movie every year. work 

How these tech companies got their names

Wondering how Wipro, Apple, Microsoft, Accenture got their iconic brand names? We reveal the fascinating stories.

According to Steve Jobs, Apple was so named because Jobs was coming back from an apple farm, and he was on a fruitarian diet. He thought the name was "fun, spirited and not intimidating".
Apple's New Top Tier iPad With Increased Storage Goes On Sale 
Wipro: From Western India Palm Refined Oil Ltd Wipro Technologies. The company started as a modest Vanaspati and laundry soap producer and is now also an IT services giant.
Premji, chairman of Wipro Ltd, speaks as presents quarterly results at Wipro campus in southern Indian city of Bangalore 
Hotmail: Founder Jack Smith got the idea of accessing e-mail via the web from a computer anywhere in the world. When Sabeer Bhatia came up with the business plan for the mail service he tried all kinds of names ending in 'mail' and finally settled for Hotmail as it included the letters "HTML" – the markup language used to write web pages. It was initially referred to as HoTMaiL with selective upper casing.
How these tech companies got their names 
Facebook: Name stems from the colloquial name of books given to newly enrolled students at the start of the academic year by university administrations in the US with the intention of helping students to get to know each other better. 
In this photo illustration, a Facebook logo on a computer screen is seen through a magnifying glass held by a woman in Bern 
Twitter: Having rejected the name Twitch for their social networking service, co-founder Jack Dorsey says: "we looked in the dictionary for words around it and we came across the word 'twitter' and it was just perfect. The definition was 'a short burst of inconsequential.
An illustration picture shows the logo of the Website Twitter on an Ipad, in Bordeaux 
Accenture From "Accent on the future". The name Accenture was proposed by a company employee in Norway as part of an internal name finding process (BrandStorming). Before 1 January 2001, the company was called Andersen Consulting. 
FRANCE-ILLUSTRATION-LOGO-OUTSOURCER-ACCENTURE 
According to the founder of Samsung Group, the meaning of Samsung is "tristar" or "three stars". The word "three" represents something "big, numerous and powerful"; the "stars" mean eternity. 
A man using a mobile phone walks past a Samsung Electronics' advertisement in Seoul 
Adobe Systems: From the Adobe Creek that ran behind the house of co-founder John Warnock.
Adobe Systems Experiments With Wind Power 
Google: An originally accidental misspelling of the word googol and settled upon because google.com was unregistered. Googol was proposed to reflect the company's mission to organize the immense amount of information available online. (Googol is equivalent to ten raised to the power of a hundred.) 
A neon Google logo is seen as employees work at the new Google office in Toronto 
Acer: Born as Multitech International in 1976, the company changed its name to Acer in 1987. The Latin word for “sharp, acute, able and facile”.
A model poses with an Acer Liquid C1 smartphone equipped with Intel Inside chips during a news conference in Bangkok 
Skype: The original concept for the name was Sky-Peer-to-Peer, which morphed into Skyper, then Skype.
A page from the Skype website is seen in Singapore 
Dell: Named after its founder, Michael Dell. The company changed its name from Dell Computer in 2003.
A Dell computer logo is seen on a laptop at Best Buy in Phoenix, 
Amazon.com: Founder Jeff Bezos renamed the company Amazon (from the earlier name of Cadabra.com) after the world's most voluminous river, the Amazon. He saw the potential for a larger volume of sales in an online (as opposed to a bricks and mortar) bookstore. (Another story goes that Amazon was chosen to cash in on the popularity of Yahoo, which listed entries alphabetically.) 
Amazon Holds News Conference 
Infosys: Short form of ‘Information Systems’
File photo shows employees of Indian software company Infosys walking past Infosys logos at their campus in the Electronic City area in Bangalore 
Cisco : Short for San Francisco. 
A Cisco office sign is pictured in San Diego, California 
Lenovo Group: A portmanteau of "Le-" (from former name Legend) and "novo", pseudo-Latin for "new". This Chinese company took over IBM's PC division. 
The logo of Lenovo is seen on a computer monitor during a news conference in Hong Kong 
Microsoft : Coined by Bill Gates to represent the company that was devoted to microcomputer software. Originally christened Micro-Soft, the '-' disappeared on 3/2/1987 with the introduction of a new corporate identity and logo. 
A variety of logos hover above the Microsoft booth on the opening day of the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas 
Epson: Epson Seiko Corporation, the Japanese printer and peripheral manufacturer, was named from "Son of Electronic Printer" after a highly successful model, the EP-101. 
Las Vegas Hosts The 2004 International CES 
Novell: Novell, Inc. was earlier Novell Data Systems co-founded by George Canova. The name was suggested by George's wife who mistakenly thought that "Novell" meant new in French. (Nouvelle is the feminine form of the French adjective 'Nouveau'. Nouvelle as a noun in French is 'news'.) 
2005 Novell Brainshare 
Compaq: From computer and "pack" to denote a small integral object; or: Compatibility And Quality; or: from the company's first product, the very compact Compaq Portable.
HP/Compaq Merger 
Mozilla Foundation From the name of the web browser that preceded Netscape Navigator. When Marc Andreesen, co-founder of Netscape, created a browser to replace the Mosaic browser, it was internally named Mozilla (Mosaic-Killer, Godzilla) by Jamie Zawinski. 
Google Nears 10th Anniversary 
HP: Bill Hewlett and Dave Packard tossed a coin to decide whether the company they founded would be called Hewlett-Packard or Packard-Hewlett. 
Hewlett-Packard Plans To Eliminate 24,600 
Asus : Named after Pegasus, the winged horse of Greek mythology. The first three letters of the word were dropped to get a high position in alphabetical listings. An Asus company named Pegatron, using the spare letters, was spun off in 2008. 
Cebit Technology Fair 
Sun Microsystems Its founders designed their first workstation in their dorm at Stanford University, and chose the name Stanford University Network for their product, hoping to sell it to the college. They did not. 
IBM Reportedly In Talks To Purchase Sun Microsystems 
HTC Corporation: A contraction of its original corporate name, High Tech Computer Corporation. 
International CTIA Wireless Show Held In Las Vegas 
Groupon: Chief executive Andrew Mason used the derivation as his five-word acceptance speech at the 2011 Webby Awards ceremony: "It's short for group coupon."
Groupon Prepares For $750 Million IPO 
IBM: Named by Tom (Thomas John) Watson Sr, an ex-employee of National Cash Register (NCR Corporation). To one-up them in all respects, he called his company International Business Machines. 
TechCrunch Disrupt SF 2011 - Day 1 
Oracle : Larry Ellison, Ed Oates and Bob Miner were working on a consulting project for the CIA. The code name for the project was Oracle. The project was designed to use the newly written SQL database language from IBM. The project was eventually terminated but they decided to finish what they started and bring it to the world. Later they changed the name of the company, Relational Software Inc., to the name of the product.
Oracle CEO Larry Ellison Speaks At Oracle OpenWorld 2012 
eBay: Pierre Omidyar, who had created the Auction Web trading website, had formed a web consulting concern called Echo Bay Technology Group. "Echo Bay" did not refer to the town in Nevada, "It just sounded cool", Omidyar reportedly said. Echo Bay Mines Limited, a gold mining company, had already taken EchoBay.com, so Omidyar registered what (at the time) he thought was the second best name: eBay.com. 
eBay Mobile Invites Consumers To Shop In Bliss On Black Friday 
SAP: SystemAnalyse und Programmentwicklung (German for "System analysis and program development"), a company formed by five ex-IBM employees who used to work in the 'Systems/Applications/Projects' group of IBM. Later, SAP was redefined to stand for Systeme, Anwendungen und Produkte in der Datenverarbeitung (Systems, Applications and Products in Data Processing).
SAP Corporate Headquarters 
HCL: HCL is the short form of Hindustan Computers Ltd, Indian Software Company founded by Shiv Nadar. 
HCL Shiv Nadar 
Nero – Nero Burning ROM named after Nero burning Rome ("Rom" is the German spelling of "Rome"). 
TAIWAN-IT-NERO-LESSER