Friday, June 6, 2014

Study materials / Books for Postal Exams

Study materials / Books for Postal Exams

Written By Admin on June 7, 2014 | Saturday, June 07, 2014

BOOK CENTRE
32, Payappa Garden Street, Queens Road Cross, Shivaji Nagar, Bangalore560 051
Phone No.080-22862152 & 41464152 email: swamybookcentre@gmail.com

We wish to inform you that latest edition of Master Guide to Paper I & II for POSTMASTER GRADE- I examination is released. Price Rs.1200.00

PROCEDURE FOR ORDERING BOOKS: Kindly send Rs.1240/- in favour of “BOOK CENTRE by EMO with your Name, address with PINCode and Phone number. Title of the book should be written clearly.Book will be sent by Registered Post. Book will NOT be sent without an advance payment.
Note: For those who have already sent the EMO, book has been dispatched.

PRICELIST OF OTHER BOOKS FOR POSTMASTER GRADE- I

PAPER – I
PRICE

CUSTOMER SERVICE & GRIEVANCES:-

1
Post Office Guide Part – I (Downloaded from Indiapost)
160.00
2
G-31 Swamy’s Post Office Guide Part I
260.00
3
Right to Information Act, 2005 (Bare Act)
50.00
4
C-69 Swamy’s Right to Information Act
200.00
5
C-8 Swamy’s C.C.S (C.C.A) Rules
380.00
6
C-9 Swamy’s C.C.S Conduct Rules
215.00
7
C-13 Swamy’s General Financial Rules
310.00




POSTAL OPERATIONS

1
P-5 Postal Manual Volume V
250.00
2
Postal Manual Volume VI Part I, II & III
N/A
3
C-29 P&T Financial Handbook Volume II
180.00
4
Post Office Savings Bank Manual Volume I & II By Kawaljit Singh
600.00
5
Master Guide to Paper I & II by V.K.Balan( with MCQ)
1200.00




PAPER –II

1
PLI/RPLI, Post Office Insurance Fund Rules (D/L)
100.00
2
General Awareness, General Knowledge & Current Affairs
120.00

INFORMATION TO THE CANDIDATES:
All books listed above are in English and DESCRIPTIVE ONLY. Books once sold will not be taken back or exchanged. Postage & Packing charges extra. Prices are subject to revision. Price ruling on the date of supply will be charged. No Discount is allowed

LIST OF HOLIDAYS DURING THE YEAR 2015 FOR ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICES OF CENTRAL GOVERNMENT LOCATED AT DELHI / NEW DELHI

ANNEXURE-I

LIST OF HOLIDAYS DURING THE YEAR 2015 FOR ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICES OF CENTRAL GOVERNMENT LOCATED AT DELHI / NEW DELHI

S.No.
Holiday
Date
Saka Date
Day
1936 SAKA ERA
1
Milad-Un-Nabi or Id-E-Milad (Birthday of Prophet Mohammad)
January 04
Pausha 14
Sunday
2
Republic Day
January 26
Magha 06
Monday
3
Holi
March 06
Phalguna 15
Friday
1937 SAKA, ERA
4
Ram Navami
March 28
Chaitra 07
Saturday
5
Mahavir Jayanti
April 02
Chaitra 12
Thursday
6
Good Friday
April 03
Chaitra 13
Friday
7
Buddha Purnima
May 04
Vaisakha 14
Monday
8
Idu'lFitr
July 18
Ashadha 27
Saturday
9
Independence day
August 15
Sravana 24
Saturday
10
Janmashtami
September 05
Bhadra 14
Saturday
11
Id-ul-Zuha(Bakrid)
September 25
Asvina 03
Friday
12
Mahatma Gandhi's Birthday
October 02
Asvina 10
Friday
13
Dussehra
October 22
Asvina 30
Thursday
14
Muharram
October 24
Kartika 02
Saturday
15
Diwali (Deepavali)
November 11
Kartika 20
Wednesday
16
Guru Nanak's Birthday
November 25
Agrahayana 04
Wednesday
*
Milad-Un-Nabi or Id-E-Milad (Birthday of Prophet Mohammad)
December 24
Pausha 03
Thursday
17
Christmas Day
December 25
Pausa 4
Friday
*Milad-Un-Nabi or Id-E-Milad (Birthday of Prophet Mohammad) falls twice in the year 2015
< !--[if !supportLineBreakNewLine]-->
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ANNEXURE-II

LIST OF RESTRICTED HOLIDAYS DURING THE YEAR 2015 FOR ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICES OF CENTRAL GOVERNMENT LOCATED AT DELHI / NEW DELHI

< !--[if !supportLineBreakNewLine]-->
< !--[endif]-->
S.No
Holiday
Date
Saki Date
Day
SAKA ERA 1936
1
New Year's Day
January 01
Pausha 11
Thursday
2
Makar Sankranti
January 14
Pausha 24
Wednesday
3
Pongal
January 15
Pausha 25
Thursday
4
Basant Panchami /Sri Panchami
January 24
Magha 04
Saturday
5
Guru Ravidas's Birthday
February 03
Magha 14
Tuesday
6
Swami Dayananda Saraswati Jayanti
February 14
Magha 25
Saturday
7
Shivaji Jayanti
February 19
Magha 30
Thursday
8
Holika Dahan
March 05
Phalguna 14
Thursday
9
Chaitra Sukladi/Gudi Padava/ Ugadi/ Cheti Chand
March 21
Phalguna 30
Saturday
1936 SARA ERA
10
Easter Sunday
April 05
Chaitra 15
Sunday
11
Vaisakhi/Vishu/Masadi
April 14
Chaitra 24
Tuesday
12
Vaisakhadi(Bengal)/ Bahag Bihu (Assam)
April 15
Chaitra 25
Wednesday
13
Hazarat Al's Birthday
May 03
Vaisakha 13
Sunday
14
Guru Rabindranath's birthday
May 09
Vaisakha 19
Saturday
15
Jamat-Ul-Vida
July 17
Ashadha 26
Friday
16
Rath Yatra
July 18
Ashadha 27
Saturday
17
Parsi New Year's day/ Nauroz
August 18
Sravana 27
Tuesday
18
Onam
August 28
Bhadra 06
Friday
19
Raksha Bandhan
August 29
Bhadra 07
Saturday
20
Vinayaka Chaturthi/ Ganesh Chaturthi
September 17
Bhadra 26
Thursday
21
Dussehra (Maha Saptami) (Additional)
October 20
Asvina 28
Tuesday
22
Dussehra (Maha Ashtami) (Additional)
October 21
Asvina 29
Wednesday
23
Dussehra (Maha Navmi)
October 22
Asvina 30
Thursday
24
Maharishi Valmiki's Birthday
October 27
Kartika 05
Tuesday
25
Karaka Chaturthi (Karva Chouth)
October 30
Kartika 08
Friday
26
Deepavali (South India)
November 10
Kartika 19
Tuesday
27
Naraka Chaturdasi
November 10
Kartika 19
Tuesday
28
Govardhan Puja
November 12
Kartika 21
Thursday
29
Bhai Duj
November 13
Kartika 22
Friday
30
Pratihar Sashthi/Surya Sashthi (Chhat Puja)
November 17
Kartika 26
Tuesday
31
Guru Teg Bahadur's Martyrdom Day
November 24
Agrahayana 03
Tuesday
32
Christmas Eve
November 24
Pausha 03
Thursday



Source: www.persmin.nic.in
[http://ccis.nic.in/WriteReadData/CircularPortal/D2/D02est/12_5_2014_JCA_2-06062014.pdf

Tuesday, June 3, 2014

Laptop / PC not recognizing your USB drive? Here's what to do

Laptop / PC not recognizing your USB drive? Here's what to do

Written By Admin on June 2, 2014 | Monday, June 02, 2014



External drives — either USB flash drives or external hard drives — should be easy to use. In some cases, you may connect your drive to a Windows PC or another device with a USB port and find that it's not recognized. This problem can be caused by partition issues on your external drive, using the wrong file system, dead USB ports, driver issues in Windows, or other problems. In a worst case scenario, the drive itself may simply be dead.


The steps below will be the same for both USB flash drives and larger external hard drives, which work similarly.



Does the drive show up in disk management?
First, let's check whether Windows detects the drive when you plug it in. Plug your removable drive into your computer. If it's an external hard drive, you may have to flip a power switch on the hard drive to activate it. Some heavy-duty removable hard drives may even have to be plugged in with a separate power cable before they'll work.



Next, open the Disk Management tool. To do so, press Windows Key + R, type diskmgmt.msc into the Run dialog, and press Enter.



You should see your external drive listed in the Disk Management window. Even if it doesn't appear in your Computer window because it doesn't contain any partitions, it should show up here.



If you do see the drive here, you can continue to the last section where we'll format it properly so Windows or your other devices can access and recognize it.If you don't see the drive here, continue to the next section where we'll try to determine why your drive isn't recognized.



Making Windows recognize the drive



If Windows doesn't see your drive at all, it's possible there's a hardware issue with your computer's USB port, a driver problem with your Windows computer, or you may just have a dead drive.



First, unplug the drive from your USB port and try plugging it into another USB port on your computer. If it works in one USB port but not another, you may have a dead USB port. If you've plugged the drive into a USB hub, try connecting it to the computer instead. Some USB hubs won't provide enough power for your external drive to function.



If the drive doesn't show up in Disk Management even after you skip the USB hub and connect it to another USB port on your computer, it's tough to know for certain whether the drive itself is bad or the computer is having a problem. If you have another computer nearby, try plugging the drive in there to check whether it's detected. If the drive doesn't work on any computer you plug it into — be sure to check whether it appears in the computer's Disk Management window — the drive itself is likely dead and will need to be replaced.



If the drive does work on other computers — or you don't have another computer around to test this with — Windows may be having a driver problem with the drive. You can check for this using the Device Manager.



To open it, press Windows Key + R, type "devmgmt.msc" into the Run dialog, and press Enter.



Look under Disk drives and check for any devices with a yellow exclamation mark next to them. If you see a yellow exclamation mark, you have a driver problem. Right-click the device with a yellow exclamation mark, select Properties, and look at the error message. This error message can help you fix the problem — you may want to perform a Google search for the error message you find.



Such problems can be tricky to fix. If the problem started recently, you may want to run System Restore. You may want to use the Update Driver button to install an updated driver, use the Roll Back Driver button to revert any changes, or use the Uninstall button to uninstall the device from your system and hope that Windows will reinstall the driver and configure it correctly when you reconnect the drive.



Partitioning and formatting the drive



We can use the Windows Disk Management tool to fix partition and file system issues with the drive. If you see that the drive is unpartitioned and is full of "unallocated space," you'll want to create a new partition on it. This will allow Windows and other operating systems to use it.



To do so, right-click inside the unallocated space, select New Simple Volume, and go through the wizard to create a new partition.



If your drive is partitioned and you still can't see it, ensure you've set a drive letter so you can access it in Windows. This should happen automatically, but if you've manually unset the drive letter, the drive may not show up and be accessible in Windows.



To do this, right-click the removable drive's partition, select Change Drive Letter and Paths, and add a drive letter. For example, add the letter G: and the removable drive will be accessible at drive G.



If the drive does appear to be partitioned, it may be partitioned with the wrong file system. For example, you may have formatted the drive with the ext4 file system from Linux or the HFS Plus file system from a Mac. Windows can't read these file systems. Reformat the drive with the newer NTFS file system or older FAT32 file system so Windows will be able to recognize it.



To reformat a partition, right-click it, select Format, and select your desired file system.



Note that this will erase all the files on your drive, so you'll want to copy any important files off of it first — for example, if you formatted the drive on a Linux or Mac computer, take it back to a computer running Linux or Mac and copy your important files off of it before continuing.



If you can't access the drive from another device, such as a DVD player, smart TV, game console, or media center device, it may be formatted as NTFS. Many devices, even Microsoft's own Xbox 360, can't read the Windows NTFS file system. They can only access drives formatted with the older FAT32 file system. To fix this problem, simply reformat the NTFS partition as FAT32. The drive should then be recognized by other devices when you connect it to them.



Note that this process will erase the files on your external drive. Copy the files off the drive to back them up first, if necessary.format-removable-drive-as-fat32 Following this process should solve most of the disk recognition issues you'll encounter. If a drive isn't recognized by any computer you connect it to and never shows up in the Disk Management window, it's probably dead.

Source : http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/

Monday, June 2, 2014

7 management lessons from Mahabharata

7 management lessons from Mahabharata

Written By Admin on June 2, 2014 | Monday, June 02, 2014

The Indian epic may seem distant and archaic, but it continues to be relevant even in today's world. If you want to be the best leader, it should be your guide, especially your work life.


1. Seize every opportunity



Look out for opportunities outside your scope of work. Never hassle yourself too much with the motive of defeating your competitor. Rather, invest all energies on a bigger goal - to add strength and power to your business.



2. Win allies



Five brothers won against a hundred. How do you think the Pandavas did that? The relationships they established over the years paid off. You may be busy focusing on your own growth at the present, but you must start reaching out to more people and making allies. They will push you forward when the time comes.



3. Commitment: Keep it strong



Once you're up for a challenge, do not back out. Had the Pandavas fretted about being negligible in number in comparison to the Kauravas, they would've never even tried. Determination and commitment will surely take you a long way.



4. Know how to build team spirit



The Kauravas were plenty in number but null in strength. Make your team work towards a single goal instead of personal ones. Take contributions from everyone. Hear everyone out; make them learn how to work with each other.



5. Know every member's potential



If you're going to manage a team, you better know what role they suit the best. The Pandavas knew how to harness energies from each man in their army. You should be smart enough to use your team's ability and potential to the maximum.



6. Distribute work



The more people you have, working towards different goals, the more efficient the output is going to be. One-man leadership strategy didn't work for the Kauravas and there is no way it's going to work for you.



7. Give your team



Individual Goals Allot individual goals to each team. This will help build up enthusiasm and in turn, help you in the long run. Even though the Pandavas were working towards the same ultimate goal, they had individual roles in the battle too

Model Recruitment Rules for the various Group 'A' and Group 'B' posts in Electronic Data Processing (EDP) Cadre - DoPT OM

Model Recruitment Rules for the various Group 'A' and Group 'B' posts in Electronic Data Processing (EDP) Cadre - DoPT OM

Written By Admin on June 2, 2014 | Monday, June 02, 2014