Loud Thinking March 08, 2014 at 07:06PM

Let us celebrate the century of Fawad Alam, who mostly struggled to send the ball beyond the 30 yards circle.

Loud Thinking March 08, 2014 at 07:04PM

The century of Fawad Alam was the biggest blow to the cause of the Pakistani team, which kept the Sri Lankan from the harms way of the Afridi’s batting chance.

Loud Thinking March 08, 2014 at 07:01PM

By keeping Fawad Alam in and Afridi out, we served the best cause of the opponent team.

Loud Thinking March 08, 2014 at 06:49PM

Our captain Misbah ul Haq is really very proactive leader…. He always places the fielder in the place after a catch has gone a begging from that position….good luck Pakistan.

Loud Thinking March 08, 2014 at 06:47PM

Up till now, the Sri Lankan team has out played the Pakistani team in every aspect of the game, including the umpiring…!

Loud Thinking March 08, 2014 at 06:24PM

In hindsight, it looks it would have been better if we had opted to bat second, after winning the toss..!

Loud Thinking March 08, 2014 at 06:08PM

Pakistani nation deserves victory in the final match which will be an icing on the cake on the world woman’s day.

Loud Thinking March 08, 2014 at 05:49PM

Sri Lankan batsmen are playing as if they are chasing a total of 160.

In my humble opinion, we damaged are cause very badly when Misbah and Fawad Alam played four overs maiden, which practically reduced our innings to 46 overs.

Loud Thinking March 08, 2014 at 04:52PM

Only time will tell whether Fawad Alam’s innings was a blessings for Pakistan or it was a Azaab-e-Elahi?

Loud Thinking March 08, 2014 at 12:22PM

Identify Discrete Tasks to Get Through Your Email Faster

It can be tricky to distinguish between processing your email and doing your work. You’re “just checking your email,” and the next thing you know, you’re deep in an Excel file, calculating the latest budget figures so that you can reply to a message — while new messages pile up. The more you can separate the job of reading and replying to email from the tasks that are sometimes embedded in your correspondence, the faster you’ll be able to get through your inbox and actually get on to those tasks. A good rule: stay within your email program during email time. Anything that requires you to open a browser or Word document, pick up the phone, or walk over to a colleague’s desk is by definition a discrete task.

Adapted by HBR from “Work Smarter, Rule Your Email” by Alexandra Samuel.

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