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« Last post by MysteRy on Today at 08:46:20 AM »
இது உன் புதிய பக்கம்! 🌅
நேற்றைய சுவடுகளை அழித்து... 💨
இன்றைய விடியல் உனக்கு ஒரு புதிய வெள்ளைத் தாளைத் தந்துள்ளது! 📄
அதில் உன் வெற்றிக் கதையை எழுதத் தொடங்கு! ✍️
விடியல் ஒரு வாய்ப்பு! ✨
முயற்சி ஒரு வழி! 🚀
வெற்றி ஒரு முடிவு! 🏆
இன்று, அந்த முடிவை எடு! 💯
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« Last post by MysteRy on Today at 08:38:34 AM »

Did you know our planet is home to 63 seas and 5 oceans? Together, they cover 71% of Earth’s surface and hold 99% of its water. But there's so much more hiding beneath the waves…
🔹 Cleanest sea? The Weddell Sea, off Antarctica.
🔹 Saltiest sea? The Dead Sea — also Earth’s lowest point at 400 meters below sea level, with mineral levels unmatched anywhere else.
🔹 Deepest sea? The Philippine Sea — plunging to 10,265 meters.
🔹 Largest sea by area? The Sargasso Sea — the only sea completely surrounded by ocean currents, not land.
🔹 Smallest sea? The White Sea.
🔹 Warmest sea? The Red Sea, into which no rivers flow.
🌊 The Azov Sea is the shallowest — just 13.5 meters deep.
🌊 The East Siberian Sea is the coldest.
🌊 The Mediterranean Sea borders the most countries, and once was a dry land basin, until the Atlantic broke through Gibraltar and flooded it.
Did you know?
🌡️ The average temperature of the global ocean is +3.5°C.
🌬️ Waves can reach 40 meters high, and rogue waves are among the greatest dangers at sea.
💧 The sea holds ~20 million tons of dissolved gold.
🔥 Underwater geysers shoot 300–400°C water — but it doesn’t boil due to extreme pressure.
🧊 Melted sea ice is drinkable — just a bit salty.
🏙️ 75% of the world’s largest cities lie along coastlines.
🚶♀️ 80% of the global population lives within 100 km of a sea or ocean.
And here's the kicker:
🌋 The longest mountain range on Earth is underwater — the Mid-Ocean Ridge, stretching over 50,000 km, encircling the planet like a watery backbone.
The ocean isn’t just a place — it’s the origin of life, the planet’s heartbeat, and a treasure trove of awe.
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« Last post by MysteRy on Today at 08:35:17 AM »
Yes, you read that right — the pineapple isn't a tree fruit at all. It’s a tropical herbaceous plant, which means… it’s technically a grass!
Native to the tropical regions of South and Central America, pineapple now also thrives in Africa, Asia, and across the tropics. But here’s what makes this sweet fruit even more fascinating:
🔸 A pineapple plant produces only one fruit in its entire lifetime. After that — it dies.
🔸 Each fruit grows from a single stem, and it takes around 3 years to fully mature.
🔸 So next time you enjoy a pineapple, know it’s the result of years of growth — and the plant gave everything for it.
🌍 Top pineapple-producing countries today:
Costa Rica 🇨🇷 – the world's leading supplier
Brazil 🇧🇷
Philippines 🇵🇭
China 🇨🇳
India 🇮🇳
Thailand 🇹🇭
Nigeria 🇳🇬
Indonesia 🇮🇩
Mexico 🇲🇽
Colombia 🇨🇴
So next time you slice into a juicy pineapple, remember: it’s not just a fruit — it’s a tropical treasure that grew from grass and took 3 years to reach your plate! 🌞🍍
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« Last post by MysteRy on Today at 08:32:00 AM »

“They said it was impossible to talk without wires… until I made the first call from a New York street.”
— Martin Cooper, Inventor of the Cell Phone
Back in the 1970s, I worked at Motorola during a time when AT&T ruled the telecom world. They claimed mobile phones would only work inside cars. But I imagined something different—I dreamed of people walking, living, talking freely, from anywhere.
So, I gathered my team, locked ourselves in a lab, and got to work. We built the very first handheld mobile phone—from scratch.
It was no smooth ride.
The prototype? Massive. Nearly a kilo in weight. Battery life? Just 20 minutes. We were mocked, doubted, even threatened with budget cuts. But nothing hit harder than the day a major investor pulled out. The project almost died. I had to defend our vision with nothing but conviction… and a hope that barely held together.
Then came April 3, 1973.
In the middle of a New York sidewalk, I dialed a number. An AT&T engineer picked up.
Just six words… but they shook the world.
The mobile phone was born.
And to think, it all started with an idea nobody wanted to fund.
“Big ideas don’t always come from fancy offices… sometimes they spark inside someone who's tired of hearing it can’t be done.”
— Martin Cooper
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« Last post by MysteRy on Today at 08:28:49 AM »

“It all started with players collapsing… and no one knew why.” 🏈🧪
The year was 1965. I was working as a medical researcher at the University of Florida when I noticed something strange. The football players—our Gators—were passing out mid-game, losing dangerous amounts of weight, and not urinating for hours. No one had answers. But I wasn’t going to stand by and do nothing.
So I built a makeshift lab with my own team, no budget, no backing. Just curiosity and urgency. 🧫⚗️
What we discovered changed everything:
Sweat wasn’t just water.
It carried away vital electrolytes—sodium, potassium, glucose. And without them, the body simply shut down.
We mixed salt, sugar, and water. It tasted awful… but it worked. The players who drank it performed better, stayed on their feet, and powered through the second half.
The Gators went from average to unstoppable.
We called it Gatorade—in honor of the team.
But success didn’t come easy.
The university tried to take the credit. I faced lawsuits, ridicule, and plenty of “this is just salty water” remarks. Some colleagues thought I was crazy for entering the world of sports.
But when an idea is born out of a need to help—it eventually earns its place.
Today, Gatorade is global.
It’s helping millions of athletes stay in the game.
And it all began with a question no one dared to ask. ⚖️🌍
“Sometimes, the biggest breakthroughs don’t come from fancy labs…
They come from caring enough to notice what others ignore.”
— Dr. Robert Cade
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« Last post by MysteRy on Today at 08:25:01 AM »
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