NaanMap is the fastest way to experience the near-by halal restaurants and stores in USA. Works with one tap. Instant searches without using the data-connection! That’s magical!
Alif Bay Pay is an interactive, fun and educational tool for toddlers and tots in your family. It provides the best way for kids to be able to familiarize and recognize Urdu Alphabets.
Urdu Nursery Rhymes is great fun and an educational tool especially for pre-school and early school going kids. You will find popular nursery rhymes through which your kids will learn and familiarize with Urdu poems while getting entertained with fine illustrations and appealing animation.
Alif Bay Pay puzzle is a fun and interactive app that helps children recognizing the alphabets. This is the first step towards writing. Letters are pronounced when the puzzle is completed.
This application allows you to write in Urdu language using your iPhone keyboard and send it via email or SMS. But that’s not it; since we all like to be social, we have integrated Twitter and Facebook sharing with this app, so you can all blast those social media with Urdu updates.
TheExamPrep’s Six Sigma test prep app contains a targeted set of questions, which address key concepts from the American Society for Quality (ASQ®) certification.
TheExamPrep’s highly sought after Project Management Professional (PMP®) test prep app contains a targeted set of questions, which address key concepts for this Project Management Institute (PMI®) certification.
Jan 26 2012
Pie Charts are unusable, they are good eye-candy bits, and no more. No they are not exactly what I am saying as I just started to explore the Dashboard Design recently, however while trying to get my head around the Dashboard mystical beast I came to know about Stephen Few and his book “Information Dashboard Design” a “only go-to guide” you would need.
Here in this article he discussed about Pie Chart and why they are not so great for representing the data. Read it here
Jan 18 2012
I came to United States in the mid 90’s and was at the age where I was very fluent in Urdu. After spending about six months, taking initial ESL classes, I was able to speak English fluently. My father, however, kept a strict rule at home that we speak Urdu 99% of the time. Now fast forward to 2007, this is the year when I became a father to a beautiful son. I remember that I was constantly thinking about the upcoming generation and the responsibility that had been bestowed upon me and my wife as parents.
That responsibility being: how to keep our kids connected with our culture, while keeping American values. If
you are living abroad and away from your country, it is really challenging to keep your family and cultural values intact. In fact, I have witnessed many Pakistanis who are Pakistanis by name only. After living in the Unites States for some time, they have lost their Eastern cultural values, and they often complain about their kids as to why they are so “out of control.” I believe that it is not about “controlling,” rather, it is more of a communication problem that they have with this generation. They speak a different language their kids speak a different language, literally and figuratively.
I met Mudassir Azeemi in 2004 when he was working as a Software Architect and I was working as a Network Engineer. In 2008 he was blessed with a beautiful daughter. I remember he came to me to share his experience and thoughts and discuss his own concerns about our language and cultural values. After hearing his thoughts and concerns I felt relief and at the same time was happy that my friend was also thinking along the same lines as me. We then embarked on a journey together, which we named “Qurtaba.” The name is inspired from Masjid-e-Qurtaba in Spain, a symbol of innovation and excellence amongst Muslims. We wanted to rekindle the passion of research and innovation among our young generation.
Now fast forward to 2010 when I noticed that my son really loved using the iPhone. I downloaded a lot of learning apps for him, mainly in English, even though my wife and I encouraged him to speak Urdu at home. I remember my son would often ask us a question, “papa is ko (iPhone ko) Urdu kyu nahi ati?” (Papa why does this (iPhone) not know how to speak Urdu?). That was the time we started to focus on iPhone and iPad application development for kids specifically for Urdu speakers. You may ask why not try to build the app for young adults? Our primary reason for keeping focus on kids is that they adapt to new tools and language more rapidly as compared to Adults.
Our first app was Alif Bay Pay. Purpose of this app is to familiarize kids with Urdu alphabets. After the launch of our second app Urdu Nursery Rhymes, my son is singing the rhymes, and he loves it now since his iPhone can speaks Urdu.
At Qurtaba, we believe that it is just another way to increase cultural awareness in young children with the use of technology that they love. Qurtaba is a pioneer in this industry, as there were no Urdu apps in the iTunes app store until Qurtaba decided to develop the Urdu apps. We will be launching more Urdu apps this fall rekindling the love for Urdu among children and their parents.
Jan 18 2012
Source: http://jobs.aol.com/articles/2010/09/28/interview-questions-hiring-managers-love-to-ask/
Mar 09 2009





Jan 8, 2012 by Shazia Ijaz




Jan 8, 2012 by Alikhanov




Jan 7, 2012 by Mohammed Gulzar




Jan 7, 2012 by azamfrommeyrinReach your buyers at their peak of interest.
Brand awareness, locally customized advertisement, accelerate revenue
Our Key Apps:
Urdu Writer: 10K downloads in 3 months – average 200 downloads per day
Urdu Nursery Rhymes: Average 150+ downloads per day
Alif Bay Pay: Average 100+ downloads per day
KEY BENEFITS
Click-to-Actions
WEEKLY STATISTICS:
TOP COUNTRIES:
United States, Canada, United Kingdom, United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, Pakistan, India, Australia
DEMOGRAPHICS:
50% of our users have children between 2–12
52% of our App users are between the ages of 25 – 34
54% of our app users are male
46 % are females
We work with our customers to understand their business needs and develop the best solution for their customers.
As a form we utilize MVP (Most Viable Product) methodology a.k.a “Cup Cake Strategy” to achieve the “wow” factor again and again in multiple releases for the product.