Skip to main content

Topics on Success, murder, Gitiswami, OBC, Kang, Delhi: Bishnupriya Manipuri love to read

Acceptance of this blog has increased steeply, and it is increasing day by day, unexpectedly. This is what the subscription by email statistics shows. The numbers of subscribers getting email from this blog where shows an exponential growth, the number of people viewing the email (that is by opening it) plus the number of clicks on it, is something that is beyond satisfactory, obviously a celebration time for all readers/ subscribers/ visitors.

This is what the statistics shows: an exponential curve.
Sunday, September 16, 2007 to Thursday, November 13, 2008

From Sunday, September 16, 2007 to Thursday, November 13, 2008, the total views on 248 articles sent through emails have been 5137. And 2471 total clicks on 218 items.
The 5 articles that have got more than 100 views are listed below.


It does matter
Jonaki Sinha Plesniak murdered in Poland
Gokulananda Gitiswami Korpek
Bishnupriya Manipuri community to be included in Delhi OBC List
Kang Yatra in New Delhi on July 6, 2008
Bishnupriya Manipuri Delhiites must be strong

However, rest of the articles got two digit viewers and clicks.

Please subscribe to the blog: receive email. Get Free alert on your mobile! Click here.

Comments

  1. Am I dreaming or reading something? Rishi! Where r u taking us?

    I have no words to praise u.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

We all love comments. It is moderated

Popular posts from this blog

Sri Sri Bhubaneshwar Sadhu Thakur

By Ranita Sinha, Kolkata Sri Sri Bhubaneshwar Thakur, the great saint of the Bishnupriya Manipuri Community was born on 26th October, 1871, in a remote village of Cachar district called Baropua in the state of Assam. He was born to a Xatriya Manipuri family. His father Sri Sanatan Pandit was a Sanskrit teacher and mother Srimati Malati Devi, a house wife. Sadhu Baba from his childhood was indifferent to all worldly happenings. He was engrossed in chanting the name of Lord Krishna. Along with other students of his age, Sadhu Baba started taking lessons of grammar and other spiritual literature from his father. At a very young age he lost his mother but he was brought up with utmost love and care by his step mother. At the age of eighteen, Sadhu baba lost his father, so, to continue his spiritual education under the guidance of Rajpandit Mineshwas Swarbabhwam Bhattacherjee, he went to Tripura. But within one year he made up his mind to visit all the holy places and as such he took permis

Assam Search Engine: Bisarok

Exclusive search engine on Assam Manash Pratim Gohain, TNN Jun 16, 2012, 01.46PM IST NEW DELHI: Assam got its own search engine ' Bisarok '. The search engine has been launched to get results exclusively on queries and information related to Assam. 'Bisarok', means 'to search' in Assamese language, has been launched and has been linked to various websites of the Government of Assam and departments, educational institutions and media. The search engine is likely to give a new online experience related to searches on Assam. Built on Google custom search engine, the search engine would be collating and building a database of web properties exclusively of the state in the North East region. 'Bisarok' has been developed by RK Rishikesh Sinha, who had earlier created a similar custom search engine ('Bisarei') on Bishnupriya Manipuri. According to Sinha, apart from Google there was no link to get results particularly on Assam. Any web entity related

The 'Star' Krishankant Sinha of Space City Sigma

By RK Rishikesh Sinha, New Delhi It is a myth that the all-knowing Internet knows everything. One such myth relates to old television stuff aired on Doordarshan before 1990. Search in Google “Space City Sigma”, the search engine would throw up reminiscent results from the people who still long for those days. Those days were really golden days. Krishankant Sinha in the role of Captain Tara in Space City Singma For those who have watched Doordarshan some 15 to 20 years back, am sure they will have nostalgic memories of it. The days when possessing a now ubiquitous looking television set was a luxury. It was a neighbour’s envy product. It was a visual product to showoff, to flaunt that we have a television set . Those were the days when black and white, locked television was rarely found in homes. The days became immortal for teleserials like Ramayana, Mahabharata, Swami’s Malgudi Days (Ta-Na-Na-Na…), Ek-Do-Teen-Char (Title song: Ek do teen char, chaaro mil ke saath chale to