PMB - PHP Personal Management book
November 11, 2007
PHP Personal Management Book
Personal Management Book is for Home & Personal Records Management.
PMB Features
- Complete Phone Book (Home, Office, Mobile)
- Complete Address Book (Home, Business, Personal Contact Details, Enhanced and Advanced Contact Book Experience, Groups Management)
- Birthday Records Management
- Monthly Bills Record Management
- Expenditures Management
- Borrow, Lent and Saving Record Management
- To-Do-List
- Events Diary
- Reminders
- Advanced Search Enabled
- Dual Controllable Accounts (Admin, User)
- Dual Security with Password and Secret Code
- Modules Enable/Disable Feature
and much more…
Easy management of all your contacts and records as well as expenditures and providing you reports with all bells and whistles included.
Software is free and under GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE.
Expected Releasing Date: 17-December-2007
Personal Management Book is for home management and covers Address Book Records Management, Phone Book Records Management, Birthdays Records Management, Bills & Expenditures Management, To-Do Lists, Events Diary and Reminders. The purpose for this software is to enable you calculate monthly and yearly expenditures and giving you detailed records and reports of billings, addresses and contacts. Easy management of all your contacts and records as well as expenditures comparison over the months and years and providing you reports about the collected data to better understand your expenditure needs with dual protection by password and secret code at individual record and flexibility to turn on or off any module you want.
Most people don’t just want a piece of software that only manages their contacts, they want something to help them keep track of upcoming birthdays or business meetings.
Thankfully, PMB offers all this and more. In fact it’s got more bells and whistles. The addressbook database, for example, is one of the best around.
You can easily create groups for different types of contacts and even add pictures to each contact card, a real bonus if you’re bad at putting names to faces.
PMB also allows you to enter dates and times for upcoming events quickly, and these appointments magically appear as a list of things to do.
It makes PMB an ideal Management Book and contact manager for those with busy lives.
With loads of interesting features and a clean user interface, this is the best software around.
For more details:
http://www.javedkhalil.com
Last Words Said By Great People
July 8, 2007
I’m bored with it all.
Before slipping into a coma. He died 9 days later.
~~ Winston Churchill, statesman, d. January 24, 1965
Damn it . . . Don’t you dare ask God to help me.
To her housekeeper, who had begun to pray aloud.
~~ Joan Crawford, actress, d. May 10, 1977
Am I dying or is this my birthday?
When she woke briefly during her last illness and found all her family around her bedside.
~~ Lady Nancy Astor, d. 1964
Nothing, but death.
When asked by her sister, Cassandra, if there was anything she wanted.
~~ Jane Austen, writer, d. July 18, 1817
Now comes the mystery.
~~ Henry Ward Beecher, evangelist, d. March 8, 1887
Let’s cool it brothers . . .
Spoken to his assassins, 3 men who shot him 16 times.
~~ Malcolm X, Black leader, d. 1966
Go on, get out - last words are for fools who haven’t said enough.
To his housekeeper, who urged him to tell her his last words so she could write them down for posterity.
~~ Karl Marx, revolutionary, d. 1883
I knew it. I knew it. Born in a hotel room - and God damn it - died in a hotel room.
~~ Eugene O’Neill, writer, d. November 27, 1953
I am not the least afraid to die.
~~ Charles Darwin, d. April 19, 1882
My God. What’s happened?
~~ Diana (Spencer), Princess of Wales, d. August 31, 1997
No, I shall not give in. I shall go on. I shall work to the end.
~~ Edward VII, King of Britain, d. 1910
I’ve never felt better.
~~ Douglas Fairbanks, Sr., actor, d. December 12, 1939
Yes, it’s tough, but not as tough as doing comedy.
When asked if he thought dying was tough.
~~ Edmund Gwenn, actor, d. September 6, 1959
Friends applaud, the comedy is finished.
~~ Ludwig van Beethoven, composer, d. March 26, 1827
I should never have switched from Scotch to Martinis.
~~ Humphrey Bogart, actor, d. January 14, 1957
I owe much; I have nothing; the rest I leave to the poor.
~~ François Rabelais, writer, d. 1553
I have a terrific headache.
He died of a cerebral hemorrhage.
~~ Franklin Delano Roosevelt, US President, d. 1945
Put out the light.
~~ Theodore Roosevelt, US President, d. 1919
They couldn’t hit an elephant at this dist. . . .
Killed in battle during US Civil War.
~~ General John Sedgwick, Union Commander, d. 1864
Oh, I am not going to die, am I? He will not separate us, we have been so happy.
Spoken to her husband of 9 months, Rev. Arthur Nicholls.
~~ Charlotte Bronte, writer, d. March 31, 1855
Beautiful.
In reply to her husband who had asked how she felt.
~~ Elizabeth Barrett Browning, writer, d. June 28, 1861
Now I shall go to sleep. Goodnight.
~~ Lord George Byron, writer, d. 1824
A King should die standing.
~~ Louis XVIII, King of France, d. 1824
Why do you weep. Did you think I was immortal?
~~ Louis XIV, King of France, d. 1715
I am a Queen, but I have not the power to move my arms.
~~ Louise, Queen of Prussia, d. 1820
Too late for fruit, too soon for flowers.
~~ Walter De La Mare, writer, d. 1956
I am curious to see what happens in the next world to one who dies unshriven.
Giving his reasons for refusing to see a priest as he lay dying.
~~ Pietro Perugino, Italian painter, d. 1523
Lord help my poor soul.
~~ Edgar Allan Poe, writer, d. October 7, 1849
I love you Sarah. For all eternity, I love you.
Spoken to his wife.
~~ James K. Polk, US President, d. 1849
Here am I, dying of a hundred good symptoms.
~~ Alexander Pope, writer, d. May 30, 1744
Sister, you’re trying to keep me alive as an old curiosity, but I’m done, I’m finished, I’m going to die.
Spoken to his nurse.
~~ George Bernard Shaw, playwright, d. November 2, 1950
God bless… God damn.
~~ James Thurber, humorist, d. 1961
I feel here that this time they have succeeded.
~~ Leon Trotsky, Russian revolutionary, d. 1940
I have offended God and mankind because my work did not reach the quality it should have.
~~ Leonardo da Vinci, artist, d. 1519
I die hard but am not afraid to go.
~~ George Washington, US President, d. December 14, 1799
Go away. I’m all right.
~~ H. G. Wells, novelist, d. 1946
Either that wallpaper goes, or I do.
~~ Oscar Wilde, writer, d. November 30, 1900
Curtain! Fast music! Light! Ready for the last finale! Great! The show looks good, the show looks good!
~~ Florenz Ziegfeld, showman, d. July 22, 1932