Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Jay Sean has done it again

New comer to the US market, Jay Sean has done it again - sending his sultry signature single “Down” (featuring Lil Wayne) into another number one orbit on the Billboard Hot 100. Pushing back 26 week top slot Black Eyed Peas' hit "I Got A Feeling", Jay Sean has jumped from number three to number one on the prestigious Top 40 Radio Chart.

No.1 Jay Sean

“Jay Sean’s tremendous success proves the Cash Money creed that great music and great artists know no boundaries,” stated Ronald ‘Slim’ Williams, Co-founder and Co-CEO of Cash Money Records. “We congratulate Jay and thank the Universal Republic staff for their hard work in locking down the #1 slot in so many platforms. We’ve only just begun.”

The infectious single has held a Top 5 Lockdown on the competitive iTunes chart since it hit the digital domain, climbing to # 2 on the Billboard Hot 100 Singles chart in near-record time. “Down” is also lighting up the video and online arenas, hitting the # 1 spot on the top urban/Hip Hop Countdown at Fuse in mid-September, and scoring as Top Ten video staple on VH’1’s popular Countdown show. The video has also become a you tube phenomenon, snaring millions of views as it becomes one of 2009’s most popular clips.

Know More about Jay Sean..........

Tuesday, December 1, 2009

Josy B, Ribkat and Biju Mathew are up to, creating a striking combination of music

What do you get when you mix a baritone soothing rhyme style with a soft melodic voice? You get an exhilarating potpourri of rap and hip hop of early 90s with intoxicating 80's music. That's what Josy B, Ribkat and Biju Mathew are up to, creating a striking combination of music.

ribkat and josy

When Ribkat met Biju, the collaboration of east and west was but inevitable. Ribkat and Josy B are also music creators for 2008 Oscar nominated movie, the wrestler, they also have a Hollywood Music Award nomination and Effigy Award for best Hip Hop song in 2009. What can best describe them? The three are innovative, catchy, classy, got swagger, have sound like no other and Josy's enchanting voice intrigues you deep within. If given just one word, would call them-- Hot! That's what they are!

Their music carries and international appeal, which knows no boundaries of culture or ages.

Know More about them....

Thursday, October 1, 2009

Death toll in Samoas tsunami reaches 150

APIA, Samoa – Stunned Samoans combed through the sodden wreckage of their lives and told of the terror of being trapped underwater or flung inland by a tsunami that ravaged towns and killed at least 150 people in the South Pacific.

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Officials expect the death toll from Tuesday's disaster to rise as more areas are searched.

"The devastation caused was complete," Samoan Prime Minister Tuilaepa Sailele told New Zealand's National Radio on Wednesday after inspecting the southeast coast of the main island of Upolu, the most heavily hit area. "In some villages absolutely no house was standing. All that was achieved within 10 minutes by the very powerful tsunami."

His own village of Lesa was washed away, as were many others in Samoa and nearby American Samoa and Tonga.

A magnitude 8.0 quake struck off Samoa at 6:48 a.m. local time (1:48 p.m. EDT; 1748 GMT) Tuesday. The islands soon were engulfed by four tsunami waves 15 to 20 feet (4 to 6 meters) high that reached up to a mile (1.5 kilometers) inland.

"To me it was like a monster — just black water coming to you. It wasn't a wave that breaks, it was a full force of water coming straight," said Luana Tavale, an American Samoa government employee.

Tuilaepa said the death toll in Samoa was 110, mostly elderly and young children. At least 31 people were killed on American Samoa, Gov. Togiola Tulafono said. Officials in the island nation of Tonga said nine people had been killed.

Samoan police commander Lilo Maiava predicted the toll would rise.

Read More....

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Indian swine flu vaccine by early next year

India first indigenous vaccine against swine flu is now being tested on animals. Once it proves to be safe, clinical trials on humans will be undertaken and the vaccine is likely to hit the market early next year.
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India has never produced flu vaccines in the past because flu is not known to be a big killer here. But after the H1N1 pandemic reached the country, large Indian companies like Serum Institute have stepped in and are now carrying out trials of the vaccine that has been developed in India for the first time.

The vaccine is being tested on animals in sterile rooms at the institute now and once it is cleared phase one human clinical trials will begin.

The World Health Organisation (WHO) had approached Serum Institute to set up a flu facility after the bird flu outbreak in 2006. The one-and-a-half year's work put in on the bird flu vaccine helped fast track the H1N1 vaccine. "We are ready with the vaccine but it has to go through all the tests," says Cyrus Poonawala, MD, Serum Institute.

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Tuesday, September 15, 2009

America's Got Talent has brought them out in the open Ishaara for you

America's got talent, and scores join reality/talent hunt shows each month. They are appealing, compelling and seize audiences attention.

Ishaara's troupe has taken America by storm, the TV reality show America's got talent on NBC has been grooving to Bollywood like never before. Their eyecatching costumes, killer dance moves had smiling judges with their 'socks knocked off', bringing audience and show's anchor on their feet, dancing with them; all dunked and dazzled in their high-energy, colorful and powerful performances wowing everyone right from the day of the auditions to their last performance where audience just wouldn't stop making noise.

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They met at Berkely and knew their common passion was dance. They are first generation kids of Indian parents who value their Indianess as much as they care about the American spirit.

With passion for dance so strong, they are an award winning troupe having performed at inter-college competitions and also at many dance festivals across nation.

Their dedication: Practicing late evening in their parking garage, stitching their own jazzy dance costumes and forming their unique style of heart wrenching drama and powerful music....

Know More about Ishaara dance group.....

Thursday, September 10, 2009

Truck bomb kills at least 19 in northern Iraq

BAGHDAD – A suicide truck bomber hit a residential area of a Kurdish village in northern Iraq before dawn Thursday, killing at least 19 people and injuring 30 others, officials said, in what appeared to be the latest in a string of ethnic attacks in the region.

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No one immediately claimed responsibility for the bombing, but it bore the hallmarks of al-Qaida in Iraq and other Sunni insurgents who remain active in Mosul and surrounding areas.

A police officer and health official in Mosul said the bomb went off around 12:30 a.m. in the village of Wardek, about 35 miles (55 kilometers) southeast of the city — a region where U.S. commanders have warned that insurgents appear to be trying to stoke an Arab-Kurdish conflict.

The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to release the information.

The blast took down a number of houses and the casualty toll was expected to rise because many people are still missing in the rubble, the officials said.

Local security forces intercepted a second suicide truck bomber, killing the driver and defusing the bomb before it could be detonated, they said.

Insurgents in northern Iraq, who have maintained a stronghold in the city of Mosul, have frequently targeted remote villages and towns that depend on small security forces for protection.

Read More....

Wednesday, September 2, 2009

Microsoft show 'faster' Windows 7

Intel and Microsoft say the Windows 7 operating system (OS) will give "better battery life and quicker boot times".

The firms made the claim at a press event in San Francisco where engineers put the new OS through its paces.

Microsoft are hoping their new system will perform as promised and avoid a repeat of the negative publicity associated with Windows Vista.

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Both firms said they collaborated more closely than ever before to deliver a product "they are proud of".

"We both made a larger investment than ever before on the engineer side to improve on the hardware and software," Microsoft's Mike Angiulo told the BBC.

The two firms, colloquially known as Wintel, said that the partnership involved hundreds of engineers and was started the day after Windows Vista was released over two years ago.

"We have spent 20 years getting to know each other and have businesses that are very well aligned," said Steve Smith, vice president of Intel's digital enterprise group.

Dean Takahashi of technology blog VentureBeat said that Microsoft's previous OS - the heavily criticised Windows Vista - had to be improved upon.

"The collaboration was in the name of making Windows 7 better and more bug-free than the January 2007 launch of Windows Vista, which was broadly criticised in the industry and was one of the best advertisements for buying a Mac in history" he said.

Read More...

Monday, August 31, 2009

Thousands call for Turing apology

Thousands of people have signed a Downing Street petition calling for a posthumous government apology to World War II code breaker Alan Turing.

Writer Ian McEwan has just backed the campaign, which already has the support of scientist Richard Dawkins.

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In 1952 Turing was prosecuted under the gross indecency act after admitting to a sexual relationship with a man. Two years later he killed himself.

The petition was the idea of computer scientist John Graham-Cumming.

He is seeking an apology for the way the young mathematician was treated after his conviction. He has also written to the Queen to ask for a posthumous knighthood to be awarded to the British mathematician.

Alan Turing was given experimental chemical castration as a "treatment" and his security privileges were removed, meaning he could not continue work for the UK Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ).

"This added insult and humiliation ultimately drove him to suicide," said gay-rights campaigner Peter Tatchell, who also backs the campaign. "With Turing's death, Britain and the world lost one of its finest intellectual minds. A government apology and posthumous pardon are long overdue."

National legacy

Alan Turing is most famous for his code-breaking work at Bletchley Park during WWII, helping to create the Bombe that cracked messages enciphered with the German Enigma machines.

However he also made significant contributions to the emerging fields of artificial intelligence and computing.

In 1936 he established the conceptual and philosophical basis for the rise of computers in a seminal paper called "On Computable Numbers", whilst in 1950 he devised a test to measure the intelligence of a machine. Today it is known as the Turing Test.

After the war he worked at many institutions including the University of Manchester, where he worked on the Manchester Mark 1, one of the first recognisable modern computers.

There is a memorial statue of him in Manchester's Sackville Gardens which was unveiled in 2001.

Read More...

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Jay Sean for you an exclusive interview

In an exclusive interview at Universal Recording Studios, New York City, Jay Sean talks about his journey so far, Cash Money records, Bollywood and much more. Click the video above right now to hear Jay Sean in a very relaxed and bewitching conversation with Mihir Thakkar, Neha Mahajan and Rachel Sutaria of MonaDarling.com.

Jay Sean We Got Our Eyes On You!

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I noticed him first time on an MTV show where his hit single 'Stolen' featuring our Bollywood babe Bipasha Basu was being played. I found him really cute, a Desi munda singing, dancing and with all that different kind of a rhythm to his music, it was definitely just the kind I was looking for in the year 2005. A charming and hot looking guy with coolest girl in the town and some tantalizing music. Only later did I realize that Jay Sean is the man, who was the whole mastermind behind redefining urban music.

Me against myself, this was the name of his first album, which featured other favorites like Eyes On You and Dance With Me, featuring Juggy D too. Little did I realize that I'll be so hooked on to Stolen... Chura Liya Hai...the song that has been his biggest hit till date and remained at number 4 on UK charts a big feat for a singer of Indian origin. Swinging to his tunes in UK, adoring fans stalked him at every step, Jay Sean became a name in R&B and Bhangra hip hop lovers could relate to.

Trivia, little facts about Jay Sean:

Jay Sean's real name is Kamaljit Jhooti. Jay Sean is a stage name that he adapted from taking the 'J' from 'Jhooti' and 'Sean' from 'Shaan', a name that his family affectionately called him which means star.

jay sean exclusive

Born in Harlesden, London, United Kingdom, Jay Sean attended a private boy's school, The Latymer Upper School in Hammersmith, and won himself a place at Barts and The London, Queen Mary's School of Medicine and Dentistry to train as a doctor. After two years Jay Sean secured a one million pounds record deal and dropped out to pursue his musical career.

Jay Sean's only obstacle was frequent attention to his race rather than his music. Jay Sean, regarding the fact that he grew up in an extremely diverse country such as United Kingdom, had developed influences from his Black and South Asian friends.

Know More about Jay Sean and his interview....

Monday, August 24, 2009

Story of Biryani

The name Hyderabad in instant makes mouths water for the flavor of Biryani that is just so intrinsic to the city’s 400 years old culture. Coming from Farsi (Persian) word Biryan, the dish is said to have originated in Persia or Arabia. Some say it came from Persia via Afghanistan to Northern India and then through Mughal courts and fusion of cooking influences from Persia, Aurangzeb brought it to Hyderabad when he invaded south. Others believe that the Arab traders through the Arabian Sea brought it to Calicut.


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There is no authentic documentation but yes the story of Biryani is spiced with a few legends. One has it that it was originally the food of the nomads in West Asia who would dig a pit in the ground, put in the rice, meat and spices in a container and cover the pit only to find the appetizing flavor seeping from the ground in the evenings. Astounding!

According to another fable, Mumtaz Mahal created this dish as a wholesome meal to feed the Mughal emperor's army. From the Mughals, the biryani spread to the Nizam's kitchens in Hyderabad, Awadh (now Lucknow) and Calcutta.

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It was a royal dish of the Nawabs and Nizams and came to be known as a celebration dish. Vegetarian Hindus were hired as bookkeepers that passed the secret recipe to generations.

Making this fragrant dish is an art. One needs to use the right mixture of spices, long-grained Basmati rice, meat, yogurt, ghee and cook in dum pukht. Dum means steam and dum pukht literally means to choke off the steam. The food is placed in a pot, usually made of clay, and dough is used to create a tight seal to prevent steam from escaping. The food is slowly cooked in its own juices and steam, allowing herbs and spices to fully infuse the meat or rice, preserving the nutritional elements at the same time. In the best biryanis, grains of rice are well cooked yet do not stick to one another. The meat, usually on the shank, is soft, well marinated and enhances the heady aroma of Basmati and the spices.

Hyderabadi biryani is traditionally made with uncooked, marinated lamb. It is layered at the bottom of a pan with rice in various stages of 'doneness'; the topmost is more pre-cooked than the rice nearest the meat that is only 25 percent cooked. The point is to have perfectly cooked meat with flavorful rice.

Historians claim that the earlier Nawabs of Punjab wore a matching turban for each variety of Biryani. The Nizam's kitchen boasted of 49 kinds, which included Biryani made from fish, quail, shrimp, deer and hare; today there are over two dozen varieties in India alone. And not only Hyderabad, you’d find various versions of Biryani across India and South East Asia. Sindhi Biryani, vegetarian Tahiri (India,Bangladesh and Pakistan) Suleimani in Malabar area, Danpauk htamin in Mayanmar, Malay Biryani in Sri Lanka, Kachchi Murg Dum Biryani and Iraqi Biryani are just a few to name.

Friday, August 21, 2009

Tech giants unite against Google

Three technology heavyweights are joining a coalition to fight Google's attempt to create what could be the world's largest virtual library.

Amazon, Microsoft and Yahoo will sign up to the Open Book Alliance being spearheaded by the Internet Archive.

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They oppose a legal settlement that could make Google the main source for many online works.

"Google is trying to monopolise the library system," the Internet Archive's founder Brewster Kahle told BBC News.

"If this deal goes ahead, they're making a real shot at being 'the' library and the only library."

Back in 2008, the search giant reached an agreement with publishers and authors to settle two lawsuits that charged the company with copyright infringement for the unauthorised scanning of books.

In that settlement, Google agreed to pay $125m (£76m) to create a Book Rights Registry, where authors and publishers can register works and receive compensation. Authors and publishers would get 70% from the sale of these books with Google keeping the remaining 30%.

Google would also be given the right to digitise orphan works. These are works whose rights-holders are unknown, and are believed to make up an estimated 50-70% of books published after 1923.

Comments on the deal have to be lodged by September 4th. In early October, a judge in the Southern district of New York will consider whether or not to approve the class-action suit.

In a separate development, the US Department of Justice is conducting an anti-trust investigation into the impact of the agreement.

Read More...

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

3 militants killed in Kabul on eve of election

KABUL – Gunfire and explosions reverberated through the heart of the Afghan capital Wednesday on the eve of the presidential election after three militants with AK-47s rifles and hand grenades overran a bank.Police stormed the building and killed the three insurgents, officials said.

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The three-man attack came a day after militants fired rockets at the presidential palace and follows a suicide car bomb explosion in front of NATO's Kabul headquarters Saturday that killed seven, a drumbeat of attacks that would appear to signal the intent of Taliban insurgents and their militant allies to disrupt Thursday's vote.

President Hamid Karzai faces some three dozen presidential candidates at the polls, including his former foreign minister and top challenger, Abdullah Abdullah. The Islamistinsurgents have threatened those who take part in the election — a crucial step in President Barack Obama's campaign to turn around the deteriorating war.

In a sign of how difficult election preparation have been, Afghanistan's chief electoral officer said that 20 percent of election materials hadn't yet been delivered to voting sites less than 24 hours before polls open at 7 a.m. Thursday. Daoud Ali Najafi said Afghan army helicopters would be used to deliver the materials to insecure and difficult-to-reach regions.

The Interior Ministry has said that about a third of Afghanistan is at high risk of militant attack. No polling stations will open in eight Afghan districts under control of militants. Preliminary results of the presidential election should be announced sometime Saturday evening, he said.

Read More..

Thursday, August 13, 2009

Judge bans Microsoft Word sales

A US federal court has ordered Microsoft to pay over $290m (£175m) for wilfully infringing on a patent by Canadian firm i4i.

The patent relates to the use of XML, a mark-up language that allows formatting of text and makes files readable across different programs.

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XML is integral to Microsoft's flagship word processing software Word.

Texas district court judge Leonard Davis also filed an injunction preventing Microsoft from selling Word.

The row specifically relates to the use of Extensible Mark-up Language, or XML, documents.

I4i filed a patent in 1998 that outlined a means for "manipulating the architecture and the content of a document separately from each other" invoking XML as a means allowing users to format text documents.

XML is also used extensively among other word-processing programs such as OpenOffice.

Read More...

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

First H1N1 case in Meghalaya: footballer tests positive

A 17-year-old footballer, who had recently returned from UK, on Tuesday tested positive for the H1N1 virus making him the first case of swine flu in Meghalaya.

Dawki-resident Salwit Tongper had returned on August 3 and was admitted at Shillong Civil Hospital with cough, cold and fever on August 8.

"Today we got the report of the throat swab from the National Institute of Cholera and Enteric Diseases and it was positive for H1N1 virus," Director of Health Services (DHS) K H Lakiang said.

Another boy Gauranga Paul, who had returned from Bangalore, developed influenza-type symptoms and his nasal and throat swabs were sent for tests.

Maintaining that Tongper's case was imported and not indigenous, Lakiang said the doctors have been asked to examine the people, including his family members, with whom he came in contact with.

Read More...

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

Taiwan helicopter crashes during typhoon rescue

TAIPEI, Taiwan – An official says a helicopter with three crew aboard has crashed into a mountain while on a mission to rescue villagers whose homes were destroyed by a powerful typhoon.

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Disaster official Chen Chung-hsien says the helicopter crashed Tuesday in bad weather while flying to Wutai, a mountainous region in southern Pingtung county. TV stations earlier erroneously reported six people were aboard.

Chen says wreckage of the helicopter was spotted on a riverbed but it was unclear if there were survivors.

Mudslides triggered by Typhoon Morakot inundated several remote villages on Friday and Saturday.

Authorities say at least 41 people were confirmed dead and 60 were missing. Officials said another 100 residents may have been buried alive in Shiao Lin village.

Read More...

Monday, August 10, 2009

Toshiba joins Blu-ray disc camp

Toshiba is to start making products that can play Blu-ray discs.

The decision marks a big change for the electronics firm which was the prime mover of the rival HD-DVD format.

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Blu-ray and HD-DVD went head-to-head to see who could dominate the burgeoning market for movies produced in the high definition format.

The format war was effectively won in early 2008 when the Blu-ray camp won the backing of all four of the biggest movie studios.

Blu-ray was largely developed by Sony. Its efforts to dominate the HD market were also helped by sales of the PlayStation 3 which has a Blu-ray player built-in.

Toshiba said it would begin production of stand alone Blu-ray players as well as drives for PCs and laptops. Its first products are likely to be ready for the end of 2009.

The Japanese firm also said it would join the Blu-ray Disc Association (BDA) - the industry body which oversees development of the high-definition format.

Read More....

Friday, August 7, 2009

45 Ways To Improve Your Life

1. Smile more, it doesn’t cost you money and will knock years from your face off

2.Stop thinking about your regrets and start living your life


3.Forgive and forget. Holding grudges is like having excess baggage on a flight. You only end up paying hefty fines for them. So just bin those grudges and travel light.

4. Watch a movie by yourself; you will gain a whole new perspective.

8. Do something you’ve always wanted to do

9. Learn to use technology, it unfolds pleasant surprises everywhere.

See More....

Thursday, August 6, 2009

DNA computer 'answers questions'

A computer with DNA as its information carrier can solve classic logic conundrums, researchers say.

DNA has been used to do simple number crunching before, but a system developed by Israeli scientists can effectively answer yes or no questions.

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Strands of DNA are designed to give off a green light corresponding to "yes".

In Nature Nanotechnology, the team also describes a program which bridges the gap between a computer programming language and DNA computing code.

The team, led by Tom Ran and Ehud Shapiro of the Weizmann Institute in Israel, has been developing DNA-based computation systems for a number of years, including "computers" that can diagnose and treat cancers autonomously.

But the current approach is fundamentally different, Professor Shapiro told BBC News.

"Using more sophisticated biochemistry, we were able to implement simple logic programs, which are more akin to the way people program electronic computers," he said.

Read More...

Wednesday, August 5, 2009

Swine flu panic strikes Pune parents

After swine flu claimed a life in Pune, there's panic among parents. They are rushing to hospitals for a swine flu test. Hundreds of people have rushed to Pune's Naidu hospital, the government-designated hospital for the test.

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Worried parents are taking no chances and getting their children tested for the flu.

Police has been called in to control the crowds at the Naidu Hospital in Pune. This is two days after 14-year-old Reeda Sheikh became India's first swine flu patient to die.

A central team of doctors and experts is currently in Pune to assess the situation and mainly to find out just how Reeda got swine flu.

Read More...

Monday, August 3, 2009

20 Mindblowing Concept Laptop Designs

The technological trends change very fast. If you are not able to change with technology then new technology makes you outdated. So, we have to keep an eye on the past and future trends of technology.

Initially an idea makes a concept which in turn takes shape and then we see the products based on that concept in the coming days, months or year. Enlisted below are such concept laptops which may be a trend of our future.

Fujitsu’s Turn Table PC

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Aspiring DJs to scratch and spin digital media files on the Turn Table PC, a prototype of a combo system from Fujitsu that can serve as a notebook or as a digital turntable.

The design calls for a 20-inch LCD screen that can be folded closed to use the turntable function. Users control the turntable by a touch screen on the outside of the notebook’s lid. Also in the future tech department, Fujistu showed the Ultra Mobile, a handheld computer with a touch screen that includes a built-in digital camera, a digital music player, and support for wireless Internet access. The same size as a CD jewel case, the Ultra Mobile uses a novel method to turn the system on and off: users rotate the front half of the machine–including the screen–45 degrees, changing the computer’s shape from a square to a star.

Cario – Notebook On The Go by Anna Lopez

cario notebook

A slim line, lightweight concept Notebook for the mobile worker. This notebook gives the user possibility to use it without a notebook bag. As Adjusted for use in car whilst stationary to enable a work space for the business commuter. Inside the car the notebook is designed to fit the interior, Once connected into the cars system, through the notebook the user has easy access to personalize the vehicles environment and settings to their preferences. The Notebook would only work in the car while driving as a HUD (head up display) with the projector, for a safe driving. And turn into workmode while stationary and adjusted on the drivers steering wheel.

Intel’s Metro NoteBook

intel metro notebook

The “metro notebook”, an ultra-thin, ultra-light laptop for the ladies. Designed to be carried over the shoulder, the sub-0.7in thick, 1kg device sports an always-on secondary display for fast info updates. Core 2 Duo, a colour non-volatile e-ink display, entirely wireless communications with reconfigurable antennae able to switch between the Bluetooth, Wi-Fi and WiMAX links the laptop’s envisaged to maintain.

Read More...

Friday, July 31, 2009

Firefox nears billion milestone

The open-source browser Firefox is expected to pass the billion download mark in the next twenty four hours.

The milestone includes downloads of all versions of the web software since its first release in 2004.

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Figures suggest that Firefox now has nearly one third of the browser market worldwide, at 31%.

Microsoft's Internet Explorer still dominates the field with around 60%, whilst Google's Chrome, Apple's Safari and Opera are all less than 5%.

Microsoft is currently in talks with the European competition regulators, which ruled in January that pre-bundling Internet Explorer with the company's Windows operating system hurt competition.

The firm recently made a proposal that would offer European buyers of its new Windows 7 operating system a list of potential browsers when they first install the software.

Regulators in Brussels said they "welcomed" the proposal but have yet to make a decision.

Firefox would be among the browsers on offer.

Read More...

Thursday, July 30, 2009

Nigerian troops attack Islamist mosque, kill 100

MAIDUGURI, Nigeria – Nigerian security forces shelled then stormed the mosque and compound of an Islamist sect blamed for days of violence across northern Nigeria, killing more than 100 militants in a raging gunbattle.

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The bodies of barefoot young men littered the streets of Maiduguri on Thursday morning as the army conducted a house-to-house manhunt on the outskirts of the city for sect members. Police said most of the dead were Islamist fighters.

Sect leader Mohammed Yusuf escaped along with about 300 followers but his deputy was killed in Wednesday night's bombardment, according to Army commander Maj. Gen. Saleh Maina.

An AP reporter watched soldiers, under fire, shoot their way into the mosque in Maiduguri on Wednesday and then rake those holed up inside with gunfire. The reporter later counted about 50 bodies inside the building and another 50 in the courtyard outside.

The militants, armed with homemade hunting rifles, bows and arrows and scimitars, were no match for the government forces.

Another five corpses were just inside a large house near the mosque. Maina pointed to the body of a plump, bearded man and said it the Boko Haram sect's vice chairman, Bukar Shekau.

Read More....

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Jaipur royal Gayatri Devi passes away

Gayatri Devi, the elegant former princess of Cooch Behar who became the maharani of Jaipur and was once considered among the world's most beautiful women, died in Jaipur on Wednesday, an official said. She was 90.

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She was admitted to the Santokba Durlabhji Memorial Hospital (SDMH) in Jaipur on July 17.

"She developed gastric problems in London and was admitted to a hospital there. She expressed her desire to return and was flown in an air ambulance to Jaipur. She was in SDMH since then," an administrative officer of SDMH said.

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Monday, July 27, 2009

Spotify sets its sights on iPhone

The Swedish music streaming service Spotify is planning to launch its first mobile application within weeks.

The company has submitted the application to Apple's iTunes App Store for its approval.

If given clearance, Spotify's service will then be available for users to download onto iPhones.

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Spotify has been called an "iTunes killer" because of its ease of use and its comprehensive, free library of millions of songs.

It is also looked on as a possible saviour for the music industry, in its bid to offer alternatives to piracy.

The application is designed to search for new music and will allow users to temporarily store playlists to their phone for use when there is no connection.

It will also allow users to stream playlists.

Spotify has said the application will be free, but will require a premium subscription to use.

The premium service, which currently costs £9.99 a month allows uses to use Spotify on their computers without adverts.

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Wednesday, July 22, 2009

Solar eclipse: Cloudy skies spoil the show

Cloudy skies in large parts of northern and western India Wednesday marred a clear view of the century's longest total solar eclipse but the celestial spectacle was clearly visible over Varanasi.

Tens of thousands of people across the country rose early to see the eclipse that was to begin at the earliest at 5:29 a.m. and end at 7:41 a.m. in India.
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It was to have been cleary visible in places like Surat, Indore, Bhopal, Varanasi, Patna, Taregna near Patna, Daman, Darjeeling, Dibrugarh, Gangtok, Gaya, Itanagar, Ujjain and Vadodra.

A partial eclipse was to have been visible in many other towns and cities.

A total eclipse occurred when the moon passes between the sun and the earth, completely obscuring the sun. During the eclipse, totality is visible only from a narrow track on the surface of the earth.

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Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Yahoo's front page makeover

Yahoo has unveiled sweeping changes to its front page aimed at shoring up its position as the main portal to the web.

Consumers in the US are the first to benefit from a new, customisable format which lets them link to third parties like Google and Twitter.

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The new style will be introduced to parts of Europe and India later this week and Asia later in the year.

"We want to be at the centre of people's lives online," said Yahoo's consumer experiences head Tapan Bhat.

"There is a destination for everything you are about in just a click or two. Now we are looking at Yahoo holistically, all centred around the user," Mr Bhat told reporters in a conference call.

The key is personalisation and the biggest change involves a bar on the left hand side of the page, called My Favorites. Here, users can customise links to Yahoo and other services they use the most from news to social networks to email to movies.

While there are over 60 of these applications at the moment, consumers can add their own by typing in web addresses.

There are also plans to allow other software developers to design their own, more sophisticated applications that people can add.

"The new homepage is designed to make Yahoo the web's number one destination portal by once again giving people one place to access everything," said Ben Parr, associate editor of social media blog Mashable.com.

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Monday, July 20, 2009

26/11 case: Kasab confesses in court

In a surprise move, main accused Ajmal Amir Kasab confessed to his involvement in the Mumbai attacks. He narrated the entire sequence of events leading to the terror strikes on November 26, 2008.

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The lone surviving terrorist of the Mumbai attacks named Lashkar-e-Toiba's Zakiur Rehman Lakhvi as the mastermind behind the attacks. He also named Abu Hamza as one of the Pakistani handlers.

The Mumbai attacks had claimed more than 150 lives and left many injured.

Kasab is believed to be a resident of Faridkot in Pakistan. He is currently lodged in Arthur Road jail in Mumbai.

In his confessional statement, Kasab said he and other terrorists were brought from Karachi, led by Lakhvi and Abu Hamza.

Kasab's defence was taken by surprise at his admission.

Earlier, a magazine report claimed Kasab was taught combat techniques by the Pakistan Marines after being extensively trained by the Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT) at its various camps.

The magazine quoted Kasab's interrogation report by an intelligence agency.

Read Original story from NDTV...

Friday, July 17, 2009

Symbian to develop mobile apps

Symbian, the operating system on nearly half the world's smartphones, is to become involved in the development of mobile applications, or apps.

Symbian will be a one-stop location for app developers, standardising and testing software and then making it available to existing app storefronts.

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Called Horizon, the approach follows the lead set by other operating system makers such as Microsoft and Apple.

The not-for-profit Symbian Foundation will launch the service in October.

The announcement of Horizon follows Apple's statement on Tuesday that its App Store has seen 1.5 billion app downloads in a year, showing that a significant market exists for a centralised source of application software.

Handset manufacturers, mobile network operators and independent sites have opened their own application stores, but Horizon will aim to provide a centralised, smooth route to market to solidify Symbian's place in an increasingly crowded operating system market.

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Thursday, July 16, 2009

850 families moved to safer places in rain-hit Gujarat

Over 850 families in Veraval and Mangrol talukas of Junagadh were shifted to safer and higher places following incessant rains for the past couple of days, district officials said on Thursday.

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Relief camps have been set up for the displaced families where food packets and other necessary items were being distributed, they said, adding that water in many parts of Mangrol and Veraval have started receding since Wednesday morning.

"Four hundred families in Veraval taluka were shifted to higher grounds last night following heavy rains. In Mangrol over 480 families have been shifted till today," district officials said.

The Army has been on the stand by since Wednesday in Junagadh district.

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Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Indian-origin scientists develop talking cars

Talking cars aren't science fiction anymore -- thanks to scientists who have developed a set of algorithms that will allow robotic cars of the future to communicate with each other to help avoid collisions.

An international team, led by Indian-origin scientists Dr Bhibhya Sharma and Dr Utesh Chand of the University of the South Pacific, has developed the mathematical equations which would also instruct robotic cars how to change lanes safely.

According to Dr Sharma, the series of mathematical equations would instruct robotic cars when and how to merge lanes, which could lead to less accidents and ease traffic congestions.

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Monday, July 13, 2009

Govt will end ID card duplication: Nilekani

Nandan M Nilekani, who was appointed as head of Unique Identification Authority of India (UIAI), on Monday said the government would take steps to end ID card duplication leading to fraud and create a network of verification and authentication.
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"The UIAI would create a centralised, national database of Indian residents," the former Infosys co-chairman told reporters in bangalore after meeting Karnataka Chief Minister B S Yeddyurappa, who felicitated him on his new assignment.

The key issue was to ensure that there were no duplicates, he said.

"The big problem today with identity is that many systems have lot of duplicates which lead to fraud," he said.

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Friday, July 10, 2009

Villagers shun school with HIV students

In a tragic story of how ignorance and stigma continue to haunt HIV patients in the country, villagers of Hasegain in Latur in Maharashtra have refused to allow their children to study with nine HIV positive children - seven boys and two girls.

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The children are from an orphanage for HIV positive children close to the village and were admitted to the school in June. But the issue came up two days ago when parents of other children went to the school authorities and asked them to not allow the HIV positive children into the school.

The school refused to agree with the parents and tried to hold meetings with them to make them understand that HIV is not infectious.

So far, parents have refused to budge and have stopped sending their children to the school.

Read original story from NDTV....

Thursday, July 9, 2009

Under Ground Lakes

1. Cheddar Gorge is Britain’s biggest canyon and is found within the Cheddar Caves, where the UK’s oldest complete human skeleton was found in 1903. Known as the Cheddar Man, the remains were estimated to be 9,000 years old.

Under Ground Lakes

2. Hamilton Pool Preserve, in Austin, Texas, was created quite naturally when the dome of an underground cave collapsed revealing this stunning natural pool. It is now frequented by day-trippers and naturalists. That’s naturalists not naturists, although no doubt someone has tried to go skinny dipping at one point!

Under Ground Lakes

3. Hamilton Pool from another perspective. When there’s been heavy rainfall, 45ft waterfalls cascade from the rim of the cavern. It must be pretty spectacular when you’re bathing.

Under Ground Lakes

4. Stalagtites adorn the roof of Luray Caverns, Virginia, the still waters throwing a perfect reflection.

Under Ground Lakes

5. Legend has it that early cavemen inhabited Wookey Caves in Somerset, England.

Under Ground Lakes


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Wednesday, July 8, 2009

Teen ends life as parents forbid him

Ashar Mendon was all set to study in Australia.

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But now, the 18-year-old's dream has died with him.

Ashar, the son of a garment exporter committed suicide by hanging himself in their flat in Colaba on Monday.

The reason: his mother scared by the racial attacks on Indians in Australia forbade him to go.

Just days ago, Ashar had got admission at the Bond university in New South Wales for an undergraduate Information technology course.

The police have not recovered any suicide note and are investigating his mobile records and going through his computer to get an idea of why he took this extreme step.

Read original story from NDTV...

Tuesday, July 7, 2009

Doctor arrested for poisoning twin daughters

A gynaecologist, who allegedly poisoned her twin daughters and attempted suicide a week ago in the city, was arrested following her discharge from hospital, police said on Tuesday.

Rupa Singh (35) allegedly injected her four-year-old twin daughters -- Tanya and Twinkle -- on July one and attempted suicide after a fight with her surgeon husband Rajiv Ranjan (38), over the issue of setting up of a hospital.

The woman, working in Ambedkar Hospital in Rohini, had walked out of their Maurya Enclave residence in northwest Delhi with her two daughters and checked into City Park hotel in Peetampura.

She had injected some poison to her daughters before injecting herself with the same substance. While the girls died, Rupa was admitted to Max Hospital in Peetampura.

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Friday, July 3, 2009

Solar Powered Blue Car Hitting the Streets in 2010

solar blue car, solar electric vehicle, solar car, electric car, pininfarina, bollore, transportation tuesdays

Starting this coming spring, a slick new solar-powered electric vehicle will be hitting the streets of Europe. Italian car designer Pininfarina and French battery manufacturer Bolloré have officially announced that the five door Blue Car hatchback is now ready for production. A fully-electric vehicle with solar panels by 2010?

solar blue car, solar electric vehicle, solar car, electric car, pininfarina, bollore, transportation tuesdays

Previously unveiled at last years Geneva Show, the Blue Car is a fully-electric vehicle that comes equipped with solar panels on the rooftop. The vehicle is 3.65 meters long, 1.6 meters high and 1.72 meters wide, and features a 50kW electric motor that provides an acceleration of 0-60mph in around 6 seconds and a top speed of 80mph.

The solar panels on the vehicle’s roof provides some power to the vehicle’s systems. It comes with regenerative brakes and a Lithium Metal Polymer batteries, and has a range of 155 miles per charge. According to the manufacturer, all the materials in the construction have been sourced to be as environmentally friendly as possible.

Every Tuesday we bring word of new concept vehicles that stand to revolutionize the world. Every once in a while though one of those vehicles just happens to become reality. The Blue Car will be available in 2010, with full scale production of 60,000 units in the years to come.

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Thursday, July 2, 2009

Rejected by DU, student commits suicide

Unable to get admission in Delhi University allegedly drove a 17-year-old girl to hang herself at her residence in east Delhi on Tuesday evening.

Prachi Singh Gaur had applied for the BA English course in five DU colleges after her Class XII results were announced. She could not get through any of the two university cut-off lists. Prachi had dreamt of becoming a news anchor and was depressed that her friends got their names in the second cut-off lists on Monday.
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Gopal Singh Gaur, Prachi's father, is struggling to come to terms with his daughter's sudden death.

Prachi did not leave behind a suicide note but the family says Prachi was deeply upset with not making it to Delhi University's cut-off list.

Prachi scored 46 per cent in her Class 12 boards but the cut off for the BA pass course in the college she applied to was at least 15 per cent higher.

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Tuesday, June 30, 2009

Gunshot-hit Britons die in Iraq

Two British hostages who died after being held by kidnappers in Iraq had been shot, a television channel reported on Tuesday.

The bodies of Jason Swindlehurst, 38, and Jason Creswell, 39, were handed over to the British embassy in Baghdad on June 19. According to the television channel, the coroners report concluded that the men had died from gunshot wounds.

The pair was among four guards protecting British computer consultant Peter Moore when around 40 heavily armed militants seized all five men in the Iraqi capital in May 2007.

Read original story from NDTV...

Monday, June 29, 2009

Super Tiny Keyboard

If what you’re looking for is a super small keyboard for your mobile device or your laptop, then a miniature device would be the perfect solution to your need. Maybe it’s easier for you to take it on the go wherever you travel, and it’s understandable. But show me the crazy man who’d like to torture himself to death by typing on a small keyboard, so small that the typing experience itself seems tinier than ever.

Ok, there’s nothing wrong with the keyboard. It’s a low keycap notebook keyboard with 56 keys including all the ones which are common to a standard keyboard like Caps Lock, Num Lock and function keys. Nothing unusual so far, isn’t it?

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But let me tell you that this Super Tiny Keyboard measures 170 x 73 x 15mm and weighs 116 g. Pretty small, right? But it was you who wanted something small, lightweight and portable so that you wouldn’t have to worry about bringing the traditional, big and heavy keyboard when you are traveling.

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Friday, June 26, 2009

Bapu's statue to be unveiled in UK town today

Hundreds of Mahatma Gandhi's followers from across Britain are expected to attend the unveiling of his statue by Home Secretary Alan Johnson in the east Midlands town of Leicester on Friday.

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The unveiling will mark the culmination of a two-year campaign by Samanwaya Parivar, an Indian charity organisation headed by Swami Satyamitranand.

Besides Swami Satyamitranand, the event will be attended by Indian High Commissioner Shiv Shankar Mukherjee and Labour MP from Leicester East Keith Vaz.

"It is absolutely wonderful that the new Home Secretary has agreed to attend and to unveil the new statue at this exciting occasion. I am so proud that only the second statue of Mahatma Gandhi in the United Kingdom will be based in Leicester," Vaz said.

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Thursday, June 25, 2009

Most Stunning Typography Inspiration

Typography is the art and techniques of arranging type, type design, and modifying type glyphs. The arrangement of type involves the selection of typefaces, point size, line length, leading, tracking and kerning.

Designed by Chinad0ll

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