Monday, 17 December 2018

Wednesday, 12 December 2018

The Geminid Meteor Shower 2018 Google Doodle

The Geminid Meteor Shower 2018 Google Doodle


Google shows this Slide Show Doodle for the The Geminid Meteor Shower 2018 on 13,December 2018.
The Geminids are considered to be one of the most spectacular meteor showers of the year. It will go upto 120 meteors per hour at its peak.



Sunday, 9 December 2018

Friday, 23 November 2018

Google shows Doodle for Charles Michèle de l'Epée, Father of the Deaf

The Search Engine Google is showing this animated Doodle in many Countries for celebrating 306th Birthday of Charles-Michel de l'Épée.







#GoogleDoodle

Thursday, 15 November 2018

Sunday, 4 November 2018

Wednesday, 24 October 2018

Monday, 3 September 2018

Labor Day 2018 (U.S) Google Doodle


The Search Engine Google is showing this Doodle in United Stated for the Labor Day 2018. Labor Day in the United States is a public holiday celebrated on the first Monday in September.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ukwXUE0qvuc

Sunday, 26 August 2018

Don Bradman's Google Doodle

The Search Engine Google celebrates Don Bradman's 110th Birthday with Google Doodle.





Sir Donald George Bradman(27 August 1908 – 25 February 2001), often referred to as "The Don", was an Australian international cricketer, widely acknowledged as the greatest batsman of all time. Bradman's career Test batting average of 99.94 has been cited as the greatest achievement by any sportsman in any major sport.

Watch more Google Doodle videos at Qualitypointtech


Saturday, 25 August 2018

Leonard Bernstein Google Doodle










The Search Engine Google is showing a Video Doodle in few Countries for celebrating Leonard Bernstein’s 100th Birthday. Leonard Bernstein was an American composer, conductor, author, music lecturer, and pianist. He was among the first conductors born and educated in the US to receive worldwide acclaim.



Wednesday, 15 August 2018

Ebenezer Cobb Morley's Birthday Google Doodle



Ebenezer Cobb Morley (16 August 1831 – 20 November 1924) was an English sportsman and is regarded as the father of the Foodball Association and modern football.

Before Ebenezer Cobb Morley set down the rules of football in 1863, the game was much more chaotic than the version we know today. His 13th rule gives some indication of how unruly football used to be:  'No player shall wear projecting nails, iron plates, or gutta percha on the soles or heels of his boots.'

Morley’s laws helped reduce violence on the field — although he did think players should be able to “hack the front leg” — and formalized the crucial rule we now call offsides, which prevents players from permanently stationing themselves behind  an opponent’s defensive line, waiting for a pass.

Thursday, 14 June 2018

FIFA World cup 2018 google doodle

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ql40m9E23Ew #FIFA2018





Wednesday, 25 April 2018

Google Celebrates Fanny Blankers-Koen’s 100th Birthday

Francina “Fanny” Elsje Blankers-Koen was a Dutch athlete, best known for winning four gold medals at the 1948 Summer Olympics in London. She accomplished this as a 30-year-old mother of two, during a time when many disregarded women’s athletics.
Google Celebrates Fanny Blankers-Koen’s 100th Birthday with doodle on April 26, 2018.
Her background and performances earned her the nickname “the Flying Housewife“. She was the most successful athlete at the 1948 Summer Olympics.
Having started competing in athletics in 1935, she took part in the 1936 Summer Olympics a year later. Although international competition was eliminated by World War II, Blankers-Koen set several world records during that period, in events as diverse as the long jump, the high jump, and sprint and hurdling events.
Apart from her four Olympic titles, she won five European titles and 58 Dutch championships, and set or tied 12 world records – the last, pentathlon, in 1951 aged 33.

Saturday, 3 February 2018

Elizabeth Blackwell’s 197th Birthday Google Doodle

Elizabeth Blackwell was a British-born physician, notable as the first woman to receive a medical degree in the United States, as well as the first woman on the UK Medical Register.

Google celebrates Elizabeth Blackwell’s 197th Birthday with doodle on Feb 3, 2018.


Elizabeth was born on 3 February 1821 in a house on Dicksons Street in Bristol, Gloucestershire, England, to Samuel Blackwell, a sugar refiner, and his wife Hannah (Lane) Blackwell.

She was the first woman to graduate from medical school, a pioneer in promoting the education of women in medicine in the United States, and a social and moral reformer in both the United States and in the United Kingdom.

In October 1847, Blackwell was accepted as a medical student by Hobart College, then called Geneva Medical College, located in upstate New York.

On 4 November 1849, when Blackwell was treating an infant with ophthalmia neonatorum, she spurted some contaminated solution into her own eye accidentally, and contracted the infection. She lost sight in her left eye, causing her to have her eye surgically extracted and thus lost all hope of becoming a surgeon.

In 1895, she published her autobiography, Pioneer Work in Opening the Medical Profession to Women. It was not very successful, selling fewer than 500 volumes.

In 1907, while holidaying in Kilmun, Scotland, Blackwell fell down a flight of stairs, and was left almost completely mentally and physically disabled. On 31 May 1910, she died at her home in Hastings, Sussex, after suffering a stroke that paralyzed half her body.

Her ashes were buried in the graveyard of St Munn’s Parish Church, Kilmun, and obituaries honouring her appeared in publications such as The Lancet and The British Medical Journal.

The British artist Edith Holden, whose Unitarian family were Blackwell’s relatives, was given the middle name “Blackwell” in her honor.


Elizabeth Blackwell Quotes











Wednesday, 24 January 2018

Virginia Woolf’s 136th birthday Google Doodle

The Search Engine Google is showing Doodle in many Countries for Virginia Woolf’s 136th birthday.
Virginia Woolf was an English writer who is considered one of the foremost modernists of the twentieth century and a pioneer in the use of stream of consciousness as a narrative device.
Born in an affluent household in Kensington, London, she attended the King's College London and was acquainted with the early reformers of women's higher education.
Having been home-schooled for the most part of her childhood, mostly in English classics and Victorian literature, Woolf began writing professionally in 1900.

During the interwar period, Woolf was a significant figure in London literary society and a central figure in the influential Bloomsbury Group of intellectuals. She published her first novel titled The Voyage Out in 1915, through the Hogarth Press, a publishing house that she established with her husband, Leonard Woolf.
Her best-known works include the novels Mrs Dalloway (1925), To the Lighthouse (1927) and Orlando (1928), and the book-length essay A Room of One's Own (1929), with its dictum, "A woman must have money and a room of her own if she is to write fiction."
Woolf became one of the central subjects of the 1970s movement of feminist criticism, and her works have since garnered much attention and widespread commentary for "inspiring feminism", an aspect of her writing that was unheralded earlier.
Her works are widely read all over the world and have been translated into more than fifty languages.
She suffered from severe bouts of mental illness throughout her life and took her own life by drowning in 1941 at the age of 59.
Virginia Woolf Quotes 










Sunday, 7 January 2018

Fearless Nadia’s 110th Birthday Google Doodle

Mary Ann Evans, also known by her married name Mary Evans Wadia and her stage name Fearless Nadia (8 January 1908 – 9 January 1996) was an actress and stuntwoman, who is most remembered as the masked, cloaked adventurer in Hunterwali (Woman with a whip) released in 1935, which was one of the earliest female-lead Indian films.

The Search Engine Google is showing Doodle in India for Fearless Nadia’s 110th Birthday on Jan 8, 2018.



Fearless Nadia was born as Mary Ann Evans on 8 January 1908 in Perth, Western Australia. She was the daughter of Scotsman Herbertt Evans, a volunteer in the British Army, and Margret. They lived in Australia, before coming to India. Mary was one year old when Herbertt's regiment was seconded to Bombay. Mary came to Bombay in 1913 at the age of five with her father.

She had earlier tried her hand at a job in the Army & Navy Store in Bombay as a salesgirl and had at one point wanted to learn "short-hand and typing to get a better job". 

She toured India as a theatre artist and began working for Zarko Circus in 1930. She was introduced to Hindi films by Jamshed "J.B.H." Wadia who was the founder of Wadia Movietone, the behemoth of stunts and action in 1930s Bombay. 

In 1993, Nadia's great grandnephew, Riyad Vinci Wadia, made a documentary of her life and films, called Fearless: The Hunterwali Story. After watching the documentary at the 1993 Berlin International Film Festival, Dorothee Wenner, a German freelance writer, and film curator, wrote Fearless Nadia - The true story of Bollywood's original stunt queen, which was subsequently translated into English in 2005.

Vishal Bharadwaj's Hindi movie Rangoon supposedly portrays her life and times with Kangana Ranaut playing her role. Nadia married Homi Wadia in 1961 and thus became Nadia Wadia.

Her first film as a lead, Hunterwali, was a huge success. Nadia’s movies always had a cause – emancipation of women, social injustice or corruption. With each blockbuster, her stunts got more dangerous. She performed them without safety measures or even health insurance. 

She led a happy and successful life, barring a rough patch when she was battling alcoholism. In her 50s, she married Homi Wadia after the death of the latter’s mother, who didn’t approve of Homi marrying a non-Parsi.

She also had a son in 1926 named Robert Jones. While the name of the father was never disclosed, Robert (who was nicknamed Bobby) was introduced as her cousin or her brother. It was only after her husband Homi officially adopted Bobby did they acknowledge their relationship. Saif Ali Khan’s character seems to be loosely based on Homi.