Monday, June 30, 2014

Samsung Galaxy Tab S 10-5 and 8-4 launched India July 1

We’ve got confirmation that the Samsung Galaxy Tab S series which comprises of the 10.5 and 8.4 tablets is scheduled to go official in India tomorrow. The company has started sending out invites for the event and it has also been teasing the launch on its official Twitter account.


The Samsung Galaxy Tab S series was launched this month itself and it’s already up for grabs in the US. Its quick release in India probably has something to do with the Tab Pro lineup not being officially made available. The new devices will go up against Apple’s iPad Air and Mini with Retina, featuring 6.6mm super slim designs and 2K Super AMOLED displays.

The overall design, however, is nothing new and it highly resembles the current 8-inch and 10.1-inch tablets in the market. While they might not look so premium, the Samsung tablets do pack some serious hardware with a couple of components even beefier than the ones on the Galaxy S5 flagship. What hasn’t been confirmed as yet is which versions of the tablets Samsung plans to launch in India.


Keeping to tradition, the company prefers to release the models with Qualcomm processors in LTE markets only, while the Exynos versions are sold in the remaining locations. We’ve got our money on the latter variants and chances are high that the slates may come without cellular support.

Here are the common specs of the Samsung Galaxy Tab S series:

- Android 4.4 KitKat
- Exynos 5 Octa/Snapdragon 801 chipset
- 2560 x 1600p WQXGA Super AMOLED display
- 3GB RAM, 16GB/32GB storage options
- 128GB expandable memory via microSD slot
- 8MP rear camera, 2.1MP front snapper

Facebook scores record 1 billion interactions for World Cup

A smartphone user logs into his Facebook account in Rio de Janeiro April 15, 2013. REUTERS/Ricardo MoraesWith 1 billion posts, likes and comments in just the first half of the World Cup, the soccer tournament is already the most talked-about event in Facebook Inc's decade-long history, data obtained by Reuters showed.

The soccer conversation measured between June 12 and June 29 involved 220 million people and 1 billion interactions, the Facebook data showed. And since the ball will be rolling for another two weeks, the tournament is set to break new records as the biggest social media event to date.

"People are having conversations on Facebook about what they watch in a really unprecedented scale," Nick Grudin, the company’s director of partnerships, told Reuters.

"In addition to sharing and connecting with friends, people are engaging in real time with the media and the public voices they care about most."

Facebook is the latest social media company to capitalize on TV-related traffic around big events like the World Cup, a trend started years ago by the microblog website Twitter Inc.

People use Facebook to comment about things they watch live, an interaction that could turn into a source of ad revenue for the company.

Facebook’s record numbers were possible because of widespread mobile penetration. Seven out of 10 users globally connect to the network from mobile devices, which represent roughly 60 percent of the company’s ad revenue.

There is also soccer’s global appeal. The first week of the World Cup alone saw 459 million interactions on Facebook, more than this year’s Super Bowl, the Sochi Winter Olympic Games and the Academy Awards combined.

The 1 billion mark was reached after traffic accelerated as the World Cup moved into the knockout round. On Saturday, more than 31 million people put up 75 million posts, likes and comments about Brazil’s nail-biting victory over Chile, which propelled the home team to the quarter-finals.

"This Cup has been a catalyzing cultural moment for people around the world," Grudin said, "and we see it reflected on Facebook."

-reuters

Global warming results drought faster and harder

Yemenis walk through a drought-affected dam on the outskirts of Sana'a, Yemen.  Sana a city is running out of water and many relief agencies feel that it could become the first capital city in the world to run out of a viable water supply.A new study tries to separate natural and human influences on drought

Yemenis walk through a drought-affected dam on the outskirts of Sana'a, Yemen. Sana a city is running out of water and many relief agencies feel that it could become the first capital city in the world to run out of a viable water supply. Photograph: Yahya Arhab/EPA

We all know that some climate change is natural, in fact, even without humans, the Earth’s climate changes. But, as we have added heat-trapping gases to the atmosphere, we have seen human influence “emerge” from natural variability.

Droughts, one of the most intensely studied climate events, are a perfect example of an effect with both human and natural influences. Separating the relative strengths of the influences is a challenge for scientists. But, when we deal with drought, with its large social and economic costs, it is a challenge we must undertake.

A very recent study tries to do just this. Published in the Journal of Climate, authors Richard Seager and Martin Hoerling cleverly used climate models forced by sea surface temperatures to separate how much of the past century’s North American droughts have been caused by ocean temperatures, natural variability, and humans. What they found was expected (all three of these influence drought), but it's the details that are exciting. Furthermore, the methodology can be applied to other climate phenomena at other locations around the globe.

The very beginning of their paper sets a great framework for the study,

    “In a nation that has been reeling from one weather or climate disaster to another, with record tornado outbreaks, landfalling tropical storms and superstorms, record winter snowfalls, and severe droughts, persistent droughts appear almost prosaic. Droughts do not cause the mass loss of life and property destruction by floods and storms. They are instead slow-moving disasters whose beginnings and ends are even often hard to identify. However, while the social and financial costs of hurricane, tornado, and flood disasters are, of course, tremendous, droughts are one of the costliest of natural disasters in the United States.”

Droughts can be caused by a variety of isolated or interacting phenomena. At its root, drought results from lowered precipitation and sometimes higher temperatures (which increase evaporation rates). The onset of drought can often be linked to variations in ocean temperatures. For instance, La Niña events in the Pacific Ocean as well as elevated Atlantic Ocean temperatures have coincided with United States droughts.

In fact the authors state that the three mid-to-late 19th century droughts, the Dust Bowl, and the drought in the 1950s all depended on persistent La Niña conditions. Of course, other factors played roles as well and ocean temperatures simply don’t explain everything. Perhaps the best example of multiple drought factors is the Dust Bowl of the 1930s. Then, cool Pacific temperatures were not by themselves sufficient. It is likely that land use changes associated with farmland erosion and natural atmospheric variability also played roles.

The authors, therefore, wanted to move beyond a simplistic association of La Niña episodes and warm Atlantic Ocean waters with the occurrence of drought. They asked what other causes might there be and how will things change in the coming years and decades?

Using precipitation data from the University of East Anglia and ocean temperatures from the Hadley Centre combined with climate models, the researchers were able to add or omit the oceanic temperatures and compare the two sets of results. They found that ocean temperature variations cause up to 40% of the changes to precipitation, depending on location. They also found that the oceans can “nudge” the atmosphere to create conditions that are amenable to drought, and that temperature increases associated with human-driven global warming also play a role. In fact,

    “The warming leads to a simulated long-term reduction in soil moisture which, although of weak magnitude compared to soil moisture deficits induced by naturally occurring droughts in the southwest United States, would imply that drought conditions may be entered more quickly and alleviated more slowly owing to long-term warming … Radiative forcing of the climate system is another source of predictability, although not really a welcome one, and rising greenhouse gases will lead to a steady drying of southwest North America. However this is a change that is only now beginning to emerge and currently is exerting less influence on precipitation variability than ocean variability or internal variability.”

This conclusion agrees with other researchers who have shown that, while human-emitted greenhouse gas warming may not cause a particular drought, it can make drought come on earlier, faster, and harder than it otherwise would.

There are two issues that I will be watching closely. The first is that any extra damage caused by drought as a consequence of human emissions will not scale linearly with attribution. For instance, if human impacts are responsible for 10% of a drought’s severity, it does not mean that human impacts are responsible for 10% of the social or economic cost.

A great example of this is with Superstorm Sandy. While admittedly not a drought, the example will make the point. It has been estimated that human-caused increases to water temperatures caused perhaps 10% more rain to fall. This extra 10% rainfall caused more than 10% of the economic damages associated with rainfall. Similarly, the human-induced sea level rise of 1 foot was only about 10% of the storm surge. But, this extra foot caused a disproportionate amount of flood damage. With this in mind, I would really like to know how the social and financial costs will change in the future as droughts set in earlier, faster, and harder because of greenhouse gas warming.

Secondly, there may well be a human influence on these otherwise natural causes. For instance, scientists have argued that greenhouse gas warming may change the ocean temperature fluctuations, particularly in the Pacific. Similarly, there are many new studies linking increasing greenhouse gases with atmospheric circulation changes. Since both of these features affect drought, they appear, at least to me, to be potential indirect human influences.

We will have to wait to learn more, let’s hope the wait isn’t too long.

-post by John Abraham
-theguardian

Emperor penguins at risk of extinction scientists warn

Adult emperor penguins (Aptenodytes forsteri) and chick, Atka Bay colony, Weddell Sea, Antarctica.
The entire population of Antarctica's famous emperor penguins could fall by a third by the end of the century because of disappearing sea ice, putting them at risk of extinction, researchers said on Sunday.

The finding justified protecting emperor penguins under the endangered species act – as America already does for polar bear – the researchers writing in the journal Nature Climate Change said.

They also called for marine reserves to buffer the fish stocks penguin need to survive.

“The population is declining. Unless something changes to stop that, the population will go into extinction,” said Hal Caswell, senior scientist at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute, and one of the authors.

As a top predator in Antarctica, the main threat to emperor penguins’ survival comes from climate change which is melting the sea ice.

The loss of sea ice is reducing the supply of krill, the tiny shrimp-like crustaceans that populate the Southern Ocean, and are the emperor penguins’ main food source. Young krill feed off of algae living in the sea ice. When the ice goes, so do the krill.

Changes in the ice around Antarctica may - in the short term - boost some of the emperor penguin populations, especially along the Ross Sea, the researchers said. Sea ice off the western coast of Antarctica has been on the increase, because of break-up of glaciers and winds.

But by 2100, all 45 known emperor penguin colonies of Antarctica will be on the decline because of loss of sea ice. Those located on the coasts of the eastern Weddell Sea and the western Indian Ocean will show the sharpest drops. Nine colonies are projected to be “quasi-extinct”, the researchers said.

Global number of breeding pairs of emperor penguins from 2009 to 2100
Other studies have raised the threat to emperor penguins under climate change, suggesting the ordinarily hardy 3ft animals are susceptible to rising heat. Smaller penguins like the Chinstrap and Adelie are also at risk from warming.

Researchers from the University of Minnesota last week suggested some emperor penguins may be better equipped to adapt to changing ice conditions than previously thought, by moving their colonies.

But the Woods Hole researchers said their study was the first to forecast a population decline across all of Antarctica. Their study also suggested there was little scope for penguins to adapt to the changing ice conditions.

The researchers said the findings called for urgent measures to help the penguins survive – such as legal protections under America’s endangered species act and the creation of marine reserves off Antarctica.

“Implementing a marine protected area in the Ross Sea could help buy time to avoid extinction and to put in place needed conservation and greenhouse gas mitigation strategies,” Stephanie Jenouvrier, lead author and a scientist at Woods Hole, said in a statement.

A marine reserve would potentially put large areas of ocean off-limits to fishing – reducing the pressure on krill stocks and giving the penguin a better chance at survival, said Andrea Kavanagh, director of global penguin conservation for the Pew Charitable Trusts.

“Given this new research, and what we already know about global temperatures warming and the changing climate, one of the things we should do immediately is put a marine reserve in place so we can make sure that we are not fishing in areas where the penguins need to forage for food,” she said. “It is one way of eliminating one more threat to the penguins.”

The study used observations from the colony at Terre Adelie in East Antarctica that has been extensively studied, and satellite data from other known colonies.

-Theguardian

Chinese troops make bids to enter Indian waters in Ladakh

After making incursion bids in Ladakh through land route, Chinese troops have made several attempts to enter Indian waters at Pangong lake nestled in the higher reaches of Ladakh with the latest incident reported on Friday.

According to reports reaching various government agencies here, the Army had a face-off with the Chinese People's Liberation Army (PLA) as recent as June 27 in the lake when their troops tried to enter the Indian waters.

Udhampur-based Northern Command Army spokesman Col S Goswami declined to answer a query from PTI about the latest incursion attempts and instead was asked to "approach PRO (Army)".

However, there was no reply from his side when it was pointed out to him that he was the spokesperson of the Army.

READ ALSO: Chinese troops enter Ladakh every 14 days

The spokesperson of the ministry of external affairs when asked by reporters yesterday about reports of fresh incursions by Chinese troops in Ladakh region merely said Indian soldiers guarding the country's borders will be able to provide an appropriate response should any incident occur on the border.

According to sources privy to the development, Chinese troops were intercepted at the imaginary line that is supposed to be the Line of Actual Control (LAC) in the lake and sent back after the face-off drill during which the army personnel on both sides wave banners claiming it to be their territory.

The incursions have taken place in eastern Ladakh and on the northern bank of Pangong Lake, located 168km from Leh, the sources said.

The Chinese patrols used to come frequently from the northern and southern banks of this lake, whose 45 km stretch is on the Indian side while another 90 km is on the Chinese side.


Pangong is a disputed territory between India and China. (Getty images photo)

However, every attempt was foiled by the Army which has been equipped with new boats.

The high-speed interceptor boats, that were bought from the US, can accommodate nearly 15 soldiers and are equipped with radars, infra-red and GPS systems.

These boats are stated to be as good as the Chinese vessels and are used to conduct reconnaissance and area domination patrols.

The sources said the Chinese patrol boats were backed up by PLA troops from the banks of the lake and the move was apparently to put psychological pressure on the Indian troops who man the area.

The situation along the banks of the lake has always remained volatile with Chinese troops being intercepted by Indian Army patrol several times after the three-week long stand-off in the Depsang plains of Daulat Beg Oldie (DBO) in May last year.

The areas where the face-off frequently occured included the Finger-VIII area, also known as Siri Jap. China has managed to construct a road up to Finger-IV area which also falls under Siri Jap area and is five km deep into the LAC, the sources said.

-TOI

86 Percent of Android Devices Vulnerable to Bug

android logo 275Android users, beware: 86 percent of Google OS-based devices may contain a high-risk vulnerability.

IBM security researchers uncovered the bug in September, quietly warning the Android Security Team, which two months later confirmed a patch for 4.4 KitKat. But the remaining Android versions do not yet have a fix, leaving them exposed to hackers.

According to June 4 data from Google, about 13.6 percent of Android devices are on 4.4 KitKat, while 10.3 percent are running version 4.3. Most (29 percent) are running 4.1.x, while 19 percent are on 4.2.x.

In last week's public reveal, the IBM team explained that the vulnerability lies in the Android KeyStore, where cryptographic keys and other credentials are stored. By exploiting the flaw, hackers can obtain banking and virtual private network credentials, PINs, and unlock patterns.

This isn't exactly an open door to attackers, though. According to IBM application security research team lead Roee Hay, Google has several barriers in place to slow, if not stop, hackers from successfully exploiting the vulnerability.

With built-in data execution prevention and address space layout randomization, the Android operating system isn't a pushover. Plus, as Ars Technica pointed out, an attacker would need to have an app installed on a vulnerable handset to infiltrate user information.

But that doesn't soften the blow: the weakness resides in KeyStore, which is one of the most sensitive resources in the OS, according to Ars.

"Generally speaking, this is how apps are going to store their authentication credentials, so if you can compromise the KeyStore, you can log in as the phone's user to any service where they've got a corresponding app," Dan Wallach, Rice University professor specializing in Android security, told the site.

Applications that require a password to be retyped each time—banking services, for example—are at lower risk than more easily compromised apps, like Twitter, Wallach said. Similarly, users should keep an eye on those apps that load VPN credentials onto their phone, which essentially hand hackers a key to bypass the firewall.

Google did not immediately respond to PCMag's request for comment.

This isn't the only security issue for Android owners. Despite multiple patches to its top products, Google admitted in April that Android 4.1.1 is still vulnerable to the Heartbleed bug, leaving about 34 percent of users exposed.

Don't go ditching your Google-based device for a more secure iOS smartphone, though: Apple's system isn't exactly foolproof.

Facebook Researchers Manipulated News Feeds in 2012

A Facebook Inc. (FB) researcher apologized after conducting an experiment that temporarily influenced what almost 700,000 readers saw on their news feeds, reviving some customers’ concerns about privacy issues.

The number of positive and negative comments that users saw on their feeds of articles and photos was altered in January 2012, according to a study published June 17 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. People shown fewer positive words were found to write more negative posts, while the reverse happened with those exposed to fewer negative terms, according to the trial of random Facebook users.

Adam Kramer, a Facebook data scientist who was among study’s authors, wrote on his Facebook page yesterday that the team was “very sorry for the way the paper described the research and any anxiety it caused.”

The data showed that online messages influence readers’ “experience of emotions,” which may affect offline behavior, the researchers said. Some Facebook users turned to Twitter to express outrage over the research as a breach of their privacy.

“Facebook knows it can push its users’ limits, invade their privacy, use their information and get away with it,” said James Grimmelmann, a professor of technology and the law at the University of Maryland. “Facebook has done so many things over the years that scared and freaked out people.”
Photographer: Manjunath Kiran/AFP via Getty Images

The number of positive and negative comments that users saw on their feeds of articles... Read More

Even so, the anger won’t have a long-lasting effect, Grimmelmann said. While some users may threaten to leave Facebook, most people “want to be where there friends are” and there is no alternative to the social networking site that provides more privacy, he said.
Face to Face

In the study, the researchers, from Facebook and Cornell University, wanted to see if emotions could spread among people without face-to-face contact.

The Facebook study is “really important research” that shows the value of receiving positive news and how it improves social connections, said James Pennebaker, a psychology professor at the University of Texas. Facebook might have avoided some of the resulting controversy by allowing users to opt out of taking part in any research, he said.

“It will make people a little bit nervous for a couple of days,” he said in an interview. “The fact is, Google knows everything about us, Amazon knows a huge amount about us. It’s stunning how much all of these big companies know. If one is paranoid, it creeps them out.”

Facebook said none of the data in the study was associated with a specific person’s account. Research is intended to make content relevant and engaging, and part of that is understanding how people respond to various content, the Menlo Park, California-based company said in a statement yesterday.
Internal Review

“We carefully consider what research we do and have a strong internal review process,” Facebook said. “There is no unnecessary collection of people’s data in connection with these research initiatives and all data is stored securely.”

Facebook’s Kramer conducted the study with Jeffrey Hancock, a Cornell professor in the communications and information science departments, and Jamie Guillory, also a researcher at Cornell.

“We were concerned that exposure to friends’ negativity might lead people to avoid visiting Facebook,” Kramer wrote. “We didn’t clearly state our motivations in the paper.”

“Having written and designed this experiment myself, I can tell you that our goal was never to upset anyone,” he continued.

Susan Fiske, a psychology professor at Princeton University, edited the study for PNAS. She contacted the authors and was told it passed Cornell’s human subjects’ ethical review. The data had already been collected when the Cornell researchers became involved.

“From that point of view, this is an issue about Facebook, not about research ethics,” she said in an interview. “My own decision was not to second-guess the Cornell” review board.

“People are relating to Facebook as if it has betrayed their trust,” she said. “The level of reaction is understandable. That doesn’t mean what Facebook or Cornell did is unethical.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Mary Schlangenstein in Dallas at maryc.s@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Kevin Miller at kmiller@bloomberg.net Bruce Rule

-bloomberg

Sunday, June 29, 2014

Iraqi forces claim to have retaken Tikrit

Iraq receives 5 Russian-made jets to fight rebels
Having launched a robust offensive against the Sunni extremists, Iraqi forces claimed to have retaken the strategic town of Tikrit from the ISIS (Islamic State of Syria and Iraq) rebels, the state TV reported on Sunday.

Armed with tanks and helicopter gunships, Iraqi forces carried out airstrikes on Sunni fighters of the ISIS in Tikrit and claimed to have killed dozens of insurgents.

According to the state media, the ISIS had been completely eliminated from Tikrit, the hometown of dictator Saddam Hussein, which had fallen to the militants on June 11.

If confirmed, this would be a major gain for the Iraqi Army which has so far shown a feeble resistance to the lightning ISIS offensive.

Also, reports said that Iraqi force were now preparing to advance towards north and aiming to wrest back the control of Mosul from ISIS militants.

According to the BBC, the counter-offensive launched by Iraqi Army in Tikrit was being co-ordinated with American military advisers. The report added that the soldiers were aided bu Sunni tribesmen and Shia militias.

However, the US denies that its military advisers are directly involved in hostilities and they are in Iraq just to protect the American personnel on ground.

The US has sent 300 military advisers to Iraq and has also confirmed flying armed drones there, but only to protect its interests.

America, which has ruled out direct military intervention in Iraq, has pushed for the formation of a new “inclusive” government in Iraq which can address the problems of all, especially the Sunnis and Kurds, who have felt marginalised during Shiite PM Nuri al-Maliki's rule.

The US has not directly called for PM Maliki's resignation, but has dropped broad hints that Iraq's crisis will be solved only after a new government is formed.

Also, Iraq's influential Shia cleric Grand Ayatollah Sistani has called for the appointment of PM by Tuesday  before the new parliament is convened.

Earlier, US Secretary of State John Kerry had visited Baghdad and told that Maliki had assured him that a new Iraqi cabinet will be formed by July 1.

Iraq is in throes of a deadly insurgency crisis as the ISIS militants have so far continued to advance ahead consistently, massacring Shia soldiers and also posting the videos online.

According to the UN, over 1,100 have been killed since the ISIS offensive and over a million have been displaced.

-zee news

Saturday, June 28, 2014

ophone which transmits scents

When the oPhone on the New York side picked up the message, the device dissipated a subtle aroma that matched perfectly with the picture.Here’s a sniff of the future and it’s called the oPhone. It may sound suspiciously like an iPhone, but the ‘o’ is for olfactory and it refers to a revolutionary new messaging platform, which transmits scents. Vapor Communications, the company behind the scent-messaging platform, says: “With oPhone, people will be able to share with anyone, anywhere, not just words, images and sounds, but sensory experiences itself.” The first scent messages were exchanged last week between New York and Paris. At the American Museum of Natural History in Manhattan, co-inventors David Edwards, a Harvard professor, and Rachel Field, formerly an undergrad student at the same university, joined collaborators Christophe Laudamiel and Blake Armstrong in Paris via Skype. From Paris, they emailed a scent-tagged photograph of French delicacies and champagne they had just poured to celebrate the launch of the oPhone. When the oPhone on the New York side picked up the message, the device dissipated a subtle aroma that matched perfectly with the picture.

The scent-infused messages, called oNotes, are composed in an iPhone app called oSnap, which was launched simultaneously. Using oSnap, users can mix and match from 32 basic aromas to produce more than 3,00,000 unique scents. The 32 aromas are placed inside oPhone’s eight ‘oChips’, which are like a printer’s ink cartridges. When the device receives an oNote, it releases the corresponding aroma based on the aromatic tags assigned to the image. Each scent is designed to last roughly 10 seconds. If the images are tagged with more than one scent, the smells will release one after the other. The oPhone introduces a new kind of sensory experience into mobile messaging.

The idea originated two years ago in Edwards’ course at Harvard called ‘How to Create Things and Have Them Matter’. Field, then a mechanical engineering undergrad, and some of her classmates looked at creating a virtual world of aroma. They developed the idea at Le Laboratoire, Edwards’ creative hub in Paris known for conducting experiments at the intersection of science and art. In the scent-messaging project, Edwards is focusing on the food space. oPhones will be displayed in cafes in Paris to test the device’s business potential at places where aromas matter.

Edwards is the CEO of Vapor Communications. Currently, oNotes are transmitted via email or social media, and can be picked up at hotspots where there are oPhones in place to receive them. oPhones are available commercially at around $150, but it will take time to gauge their impact. In New York, people can try out the oPhone at The American Museum of Natural History during three weekends in July. oNotes add a new dimension to telecommunication. The possibilities for the technology are vast: scent messages could be aromatic pictures of a cup of coffee, olfactory tweets from a wine tasting, scented sounds from a family dinner party, or even a promotional campaign for a restaurant. “One day, fairly soon, any user of a mobile phone anywhere will not only be able to receive a scent message—invoking a culinary pleasure—but quickly send another back, similar to how we exchange audio information today with friends around the world,” says Edwards. So far, oNotes are limited to scent-tagged images composed in oSnap, a free mobile messaging app for iPhone devices. Whether that is the scent of success is too early to tell.

10 killed most of them children in Delhi building collapse

A four-storey building collapsed in Inderlok area in North Delhi this morning. (representative photo)At least ten people including five children were killed when a three-storey residential building in Tulsi Nagar area of Inderlok, Delhi collapsed on Saturday.

The Home Ministery yesterday condoled the loss of lives and prayed for speedy recovery of those injured in the accident

A team of NDRF officials reached the spot to help the people affected by the tragedy, HMO India said.

North Delhi Mayor Yogendra Chandolia said that inquiry was ordered against three officials.

On the other hand, NDMC chairman Rajesh Bhatiya said, “Illegal construction was going on in the adjacent plot. Neither map of the building was sent for approval to MCD nor any information was provided to the authorities. One junior engineer and an assistant engineer were suspended."

Aam Aadmi Party chief Arvind Kejriwal visited the site of the incident and said that the people who are responsible for the collapse of the building must be punished, adding, "This is sad incident,I pray for the strength of families of the deceased."

According to the eye-witnesses, the incident occurred in the morning around 8.30 am due to construction work on the adjacent plot. They also said that the building was 50-year old and many families were staying there.

While 14 people were pulled out from the debris.

The injured were rushed to Bara Hindu Rao Hospital.

Several firebrigades, cranes and ambulances carried out the rescue work.

-ZN

NASA plans to launch a flying-saucer-shaped vehicle

NASA plans to launch a flying-saucer-shaped vehicle to test technology for landing heavy loads - and one day even people - on Mars. The Low-Density Supersonic Decelerator (LDSD) will be taken into the stratosphere from the Navy's Pacific Missile Range Facility on Kauai. How the vehicle is launched.

After several weather delays, NASA will try to launch a "flying saucer" into Earth's atmosphere Saturday to test technology that could be used to land on Mars.

The attempt off the coast of the Hawaiian island of Kauai will test the disc-shaped vehicle and a giant parachute. Those interested can watch live at 2:15 p.m. ET.

The test at the Kauai military range has been postponed several times since June 2 because of winds.

It may seem straight out of a B-movie, but the space agency says the launch has a serious purpose: to test technology that will help land spacecraft and someday humans on Mars.

NASA still relies on some of the basic designs developed more than 40 years ago to land the Viking spacecraft on Mars, principal investigator Ian Clark of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory said earlier this month.

"We've been using the same parachutes for several decades now," he said. "If we want to eventually land a human on the surface of Mars, we realized we need to develop new technologies."

The low-density supersonic decelerator, as it's officially known, will ascend into the skies dangling from a gargantuan balloon filled with helium. At 34 million cubic feet, the balloon would fill the Rose Bowl, encasing the helium in a skin made of a high-tech film as thin as sandwich wrap.

After the balloon and its load soar to roughly 23 miles high, the balloon will break away from the vehicle and drop to Earth, the cue for a rocket attached to the saucer to fire. The rocket will propel the saucer to four times the speed of sound, duplicating the rapid clip of a spacecraft bound for Mars.

If all goes according to plan, the saucer's inflatable ring, made of the same material as bulletproof vests, will pop up, expanding to some 3 feet high in a fraction of a second. The ring is designed to brake the vehicle as it speeds through the atmosphere. Finally a parachute much bigger than anything of its kind will cushion the saucer as it drifts down to an ocean landing.

NASA's latest rover on Mars, the Mars Science Laboratory, weighed about a ton. The new technology being tested would allow the landing of a load twice as heavy, and the use of multiple parachutes could mean even spacecraft of 20 to 30 tons could make a soft landing, Clark said.

At the test location high above the Earth, the air will be as thin as the wispy atmosphere around Mars, but it will be a lot easier to recover the saucer if things go wrong. The balloon could fail or the vehicle itself may prove balky, Clark said.

"We want to test them here — where it's a lot cheaper — before we we send them to Mars," said project manager Mark Adler, also of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory.

Contributing: Associated Press

Practice doesn’t always make you perfect

studyingWhile repetition enhances the factual content of memories, it can reduce the amount of detail stored with those memories and may even lead to false memories, a new study has found. University of California – Irvine neurobiologists Zachariah Reagh and Michael Yassa have found that with repeated recall, nuanced aspects may fade away. In the study, student participants were asked to look at pictures either once or three times. They were then tested on their memories of those images. (Read: Learning a lot during adolescence good for your brain)

The researchers found that multiple views increased factual recall but actually hindered subjects’ ability to reject similar ‘imposter’ pictures. This suggests that the details of those memories may have been shaken loose by repetition. This discovery supports Reagh’s and Yassa’s Competitive Trace Theory – published last year – which posits that the details of a memory become more subjective the more they’re recalled and can compete with bits of other similar memories. The scientists hypothesise that this may even lead to false memories, akin to a brain version of the telephone game. (Read: Revealed – What happens to your brain when you’re learning)

Yassa, an assistant professor of neurobiology & behaviour, said that these findings do not discredit the practice of repetitive learning.However, he noted, pure repetition alone has limitations. For a more enriching and lasting learning experience through which nuance and detail are readily recalled, other memory techniques should be used to complement repetition. (Read: Learning a new language during childhood alters your brain!)

Source: IANS

playing outside makes kids more spiritual

Turn off the TV, hide the game consoles and send your kids to play in the great outdoors if you want to raise more thoughtful, fulfilled and spiritual children, suggest the findings of a small study.

Children who spend significant amounts of time playing outside were found to have a stronger sense of purpose, peacefulness and spiritual connection to the earth.

For their study, published in the Journal of the Study of Religion, Nature and Culture, researchers from Michigan State University conducted in-depth interviews, drawings, diaries, observation and conversation with parents to measure the children’s esthetic values and sensibilities.

Children who spent five to 10 hours a week playing outside were found to demonstrate strong imaginations, creativity, and curiosity, as well as a deep appreciation for nature’s beauty, whether it be lush green bushes, water patterns or a fascination with bees’ nests, researchers noted.

The 10 children, ages seven and eight, reported feelings of peacefulness and wonderment at natural phenomena like storms, and said they felt happy. They also expressed a sense of belonging in the world and an acute need to protect the earth.

Though small in scale, the findings underscore the importance of free play for children and its lasting impact: the parents of children who expressed the highest affinity toward nature likewise reported spending significant amounts of time playing outdoors in their childhood.

More than video game graphics and cartoons, researchers theorize that nature’s multisensory diversity — sights, sounds and colors — can help children feel more alive and build self-confidence.

Another study published out of Finland, meanwhile, found gender differences in the way school-aged boys and girls viewed nature: While girls said they appreciated the beauty of flowers and plants, more than 30 percent of boys in the study said they could live without vegetation.

Ahmedabad Municipal Corporation seek public opinion on water meter

After putting on hold the water policy 16 days ago, the Ahmedabad Municipal Corporation's (AMC) standing committee realized that prior to implementing such an important policy, it should seek public opinion - as any democratic process would demand. This would mean that the policy, with its suggestions on proposed water meter installation charges, water supply rates, should have ideally been posted on public forum or a website to invite suggestions and objections.

For this the AMC has now decided to engage a special advocate panel to scrutinize every clause of the policy before it goes before the public. "The process would take some time before the standing committee brings the water policy aboard," said a senior AMC official.

"If town planning schemes are put in public domain for inviting suggestions and objections, why should not a policy such as water metering be put in public forum? A municipal corporation is a democratic body and the committee members realized that it would be vital that public opinion be sought. For now the advocates are sprucing up the policy so that there are lesser objections," explained the official.

Another interesting aspect to the policy is that that the BJP-led AMC after eyeing the civic body elections next year will avoid any controversy over the proposed policy. Two weeks ago, AMC had placed a concept paper on the new water metering and tariff policy for more than 13 lakh properties in the city before the standing committee.

In the case of residential societies, according to the policy, it will now be compulsory for every house in a society to install a meter to check wastage and usage of water. Under this policy a payment limit was set for fixed usage of up to 20,000 litres a month and a fixed rate that ranged between Rs 240 to Rs 2,880 depending on the carpet area of the property. Any extra usage will be charged at rates per 1,000 litres of supply. This rate ranges from Rs 1 for properties with a carpet area of up to 15 square metres, and at Rs 12 for properties with a carpet area of more than 1,000 square metres.

The AMC had earlier announced the installation of water meters in areas of Jodhpur, Navrangpura, Stadium and Juna Vadaj on a pilot basis to study water usage, and then planned to extend metering to the entire city. The proposal says that the AMC incurs a cost of Rs 6.05 per 1,000 litres for treating and supplying water to citizens and charges 68 paise per 1,000 litres, according to the present taxation structure.
-TOI

A building in chennai collapsed 1 died 50 feared trapped

Chennai Building Collapse: One Dead, 50 Feared TrappedOne person died after one of the two towers of a 11-storey under-construction building collapsed near Chennai on Saturday. (See pics)

11 people have been rescued so far a
nd the injured are being admitted to the Ramachandra Medical College and Hospital for treatment. Around 50 people are still feared trapped under the debris of the residential building.

12 fire tenders and the National Disaster Management team have reached the collapse site.

Expressing grief over the incident, Tamil Nadu Chief Minister J Jayalalithaa issued a statement saying that the Chennai Police Commissioner and other senior officials are on the spot and tough action would be taken against those responsible.

The incident occurred at Moulivakkam near Porur in the western suburb, about 20 km from Chennai, as rains lashed the area and several other parts of the city today.
-ndtv

discover india app launched by tourism ministry india

The Ministry of Tourism has launched a mobile application to enable its users to independently travel and experience 16 cities in the country. The self-guided tour application ‘Incredible India Walking Tours’ was launched by the Ministry in collaboration with Genesys International Corporation and will cover 16 Indian cities including Agra, Amritsar, Ahmedabad, Bangalore, Bhopal, Chandigarh, Chennai, Delhi, Coastal Goa, Hyderabad, Jaipur, Kolkata, Mumbai, Patna, Pune and Surat. The facility will be extended to 36 cities by December 2015. The app enables users to sight-see free of cost at their own pace and convenience, with the help of walking tours curated by travel experts. “We are extremely excited about this because it is the first time an app can enable users to discover India on their own. It’s free, easy to use and, most importantly, comes with 360 degree street views and information put together by a panel of experts. It’s like having a local take you by the hand and show you his city, at your convenience,” Tourism Minister Sripad Naik said. The application, however, is only available on Blackberry mobile handsets. It runs on all BlackBerry 10 handsets including the Z3, Z10, Z30, Q5 and Q10 phones. An Android version of the free application is also being worked upon and is expected to be announced in coming weeks, said a senior Tourism Ministry official.

asus launches ZenFone5 with 149$ price

zenphone-uiThe ZenFone series had a launch price of $99, for its 4-inch phone. The 5-incher was priced at $149 and a 6-incher at $199. We know that converting those prices into Rupees might be futile, but the message is clear — these are going to be affordable devices. A full reviewing of the phone can be done only after using it for a few days. This review is based on impressions from the first 24 hours.


What is best?

That has to be the new Zen UI. I think it is the most refreshing take on Android since the HTC Sense. It is slick, it is stylish and over all it is functional. You can do all the important things like make a call, open camera and messaging from the lock screen itself. In fact, the lock screen even shows what is next on your schedule. Asus has redesigned even  the tiles for the ZenFone. The tiles are good, but it takes a while for you to find even the most used ones like the camera app. That is just because you brain has been programmed to look for something else.

DESIGN: The design has the Asus trademark with brushed metal and sharp edges. You will like the feel of this phone with the matte finish rear flap and metallic buttons.

CAMERA: Another great aspect of the phone is its new PixelMaster camera. As our video shows it is in the top draw when it comes to low-light photography. Not many flagships phones can claim this kind of picture quality. But it also means, you dont get a lot of subtle night shows. Everything is so perfectly bright. The camera also gives you a lot of options in modes and adjustments. The camera sensor has larger photoreceptors and an f/2.0 lens to get in more light. Plus, the five-lens combination removes distortions.

PERFORMANCE: A day is too little time to take a call on overall performance. But what I saw and felt was impressive. The Intel processor seems to be pretty fast and the there was no lag to be felt anywhere. This combined with the new UI give a very fluid experience. Also, the phone stayed cool throughout the day, which is a rarity with high-specced Android phones these days. I have to credit that to the low thermal footprint of the Intel Atom processor.

Verdict: Too early to give a full verdict. I still haven’t tested the camera and overall performance of the phone. But I promise a longer, more detailed review towards the time of launch in early July. Hang on till then?

Specs

Display: 5″ 1280*720 IPS+ Panel, Corning Gorilla Glass 3

CPU: Intel Atom Dual-Core Z2560 1.6GHz

RAM: 2GB

Storage: 16GB & 8GB

Connectivity: 802.11 b/g/n, Bluetooth 4.0

Camera: 2MP front, 8MP rear

Battery: 2110 mAh

OS: Android JellyBean 4.3 (will update to 4.4 KitKat)

Memory Slot: MicroSD card (up to 64 GB)

SIM: Dual Micro SIM card

-IE

Thursday, June 26, 2014

Heart-pounding new rides coming up at Kankaria

AHMEDABAD: The Kankaria Amusement Park, work on which is close to completion, will provide Amdavadis five world class rides. The park coming up at the new Balvatika in Kankaria is scheduled to open to the public within a month.

The Boomerang Roller Coaster takes riders to a height of 55 ft. It can carry 20 people at a time and travels at a speed of 16.67 metres per second.

The Flipping Arm is another exciting ride that is being set up. It is designed like a forestry tractor with three arms that rotate clockwise and anti-clockwise at a minimum speed of 1 metre per second and a maximum speed of 15 metres per second. The most exciting part of this ride is that as the arms oscillate, the body also moves in multiple directions.

"The Flipping Arm is going to be the most unique and amusing ride here for both children and adults," said Suhas Makwana, supervisor of Kankaria Amusement Park.

The three-meter-tall, 'Torching Tower', which has 10 seats, will have the riders' hearts racing in no time. The seats will initially rise at a speed of 3 metre per second. Once they reach the top, they will come down at a speed of 10 metres per second.

Disk 'O', also known as 'the pendulum ride', can carry 15 people at a time. Its arm oscillates along a 180-degree arc at a speed that varies with the weight of the passengers. The oscillating arm's speed can go up to 10 metres per second.

A merry-go-round with a carrying capacity of 58 persons will also be part of the amusement park. The promoters are in the process of building a kids' zone where there will be many computerized games for children.

"All the rides at Kankaria are being set up by a Netherlands-based amusement rides manufacturing company. This is the first time that the company has set up such rides in South Asia," said Makwana.

-TOI

Wednesday, June 25, 2014

How government plans to leverage cloud computing

How government plans to leverage cloud computingThe Indian government is looking to leverage cloud computing in a big way, beginning with its multi-billion dollar mission-mode projects, six of which will be kick-started within a month's time, following an evaluation of what technological changes can be brought about in these to improve efficiency and provide better citizen services.


Department of Electronics and Information Technology (DeitY) secretary Ram Sewak Sharma told ET that he has identified six existing mission mode projects (MMP) which will be assessed by an internal group, based on the need for technology upgradation, scope of process simplification with emerging technologies and the possibility of leveraging newer technology platforms.

"We can redesign a lot of projects now. In a lot of these, we can provide SaaS (softwareas-a-service), deploy the software centrally, and everybody should become a client and start using it...you can converge this infrastructure so you can rewrite codes, make them more efficient, use more technologies, use more delivery mediums," said Sharma.

The government's MMPs focus on one aspect of e-governance such as pensions, banking, insurance and judiciary. These are classified as central, state or integrated projects, and each state can identify up to five MMPs for its own needs.

These projects include Crime and Criminal Tracking Network & Systems (CCTNS) Scheme, e-Courts, road transport, treasuries and commercial taxes. It is also assessing the national social assistance programme and another one related to prisons.

The combined total outlay of these projects, most of which were sanctioned between 2007 and 2010, is over Rs 4,842.41 crore, according to figures obtained from a 2011 DeitY report.

The group will make recommendations on the possibility of using a common software across different MMPs, migration from legacy systems to newer ones, and implementing more such projects in different areas to enable better egovernance, Sharma added.

In tune with prime minister Narendra Modi's slogan of "minimum government, maximum governance", DeitY's roadmap seeks to leverage different media and technology including cloud, broadband and mobile.

The use of existing platforms such as Aadhaar, social media, payment gateways, and new delivery mediums such as real-time applications are just some of the ways this can be achieved, Sharma said.


-TOI

Google has announced Android One

Google has announced Android One, a design reference platform that will enable manufacturers to build ultra-cheap smartphones with much more ease. The move could see Indian mobile device brands up the ante with stable entry-level smartphones powered by Android mobile operating system.

Delivering his keynote address at I/O 2014, Google's annual developer conference in San Francisco on Wednesday, Sundar Pichai, Google's head of Android and Chrome platforms, said Android One will in fact let phone-makers pool in resources to create a reference platform for smartphones, thus saving time and costs in launching new models.

The software powering these sub-Rs 6,000 smartphones will be stock Android, but manufacturers and telecom carriers can differentiate their products by adding a few of their own custom apps without diluting the Android experience like bigger players Samsung, HTC, LG and Sony etc already do.

Like Nexus and Google Play Edition products, Android One smartphones will get software updates from Google. Pichai said that these smartphones will get a list of recommended apps from 'Play Auto-installs'.

Google will begin the programme from India and announced that it has already roped in Micromax, Karbonn and Spice as initial partners. Interestingly, Microsoft is also trying to capture this segment by working closely with Indian brands like Micromax, Xolo and Karbonn to launch cheap smartphones that run on its Windows Phone 8.1.

In the keynote, Pichai gave the example of an Android One-powered Micromax smartphone, which will have a 4.5-inch screen, dual sim functionality, microSD card support and FM radio priced under $100.

Google has revealed that Android is used by a billion users and the Android One initiative is part of its aim to reach out to the next five billion smartphone users. Currently, only 10% of India's user base possesses smartphones and Google's move could lead to a proliferation of affordable Android-based smartphones reaching many more hands.

Smartphone sales in India remain high at the bottom end and the sub-Rs 10,000 segment has seen sales surge with the launch of Moto E. Various manufacturers are looking to tap into this demand with ultra-cheap smartphones even with the latest version of the Android.

Though there are a few $100 (Rs 5,000-6,000) Android smartphones in the Indian market, but they are restricted by low-end hardware and generally deliver a poor user experience. If Android One devices are able to deliver good performance without breaking the price barrier, Google will be able to turn feature phone users into smartphone buyers and increase its own user base.

However, on the price front, Mozilla is working on undercutting even Google. It has partnered with Spice and Intex to bring Firefox OS-powered smartphones to India for less than Rs 2,000, but its app store remains nascent compared to Google's Play Store marketplace.

It also remains to be seen how far Microsoft will respond to the development. On one hand, it has Nokia X, Asha and entry-level Lumia phones in its arsenal, and on the other it is trying to closely work with the same set of manufacturers to launch cheaper Windows Phone handsets.

-TOI

Google will bring low cost phones to india by september october

Google announced Wednesday it was working on a low-cost smartphone aimed at emerging markets as part of an initiative called Android One.



The Android-powered handset will be built with a basic set of features including FM radio, have a screen slightly smaller than five inches (12.7 centimeters) and be priced at less than $100, Google senior vice president Sundar Pichai said at the start of the technology giant's annual developers conference.

"We are going to be launching it around the world, but will launch in India first in the fall of this year," Pichai said.

He added that Google was working with carriers in India to provide affordable telecom service packages to go with the smartphones, which could in many cases provide internet access for the first time.

The Android One initiative sets out to work with smartphone makers and others in the "ecosystem" to pool resources and standardize hardware platforms to provide "turnkey solutions" for making handsets, according to Pichai.

"There are many people — billions of people, in fact — who still don't have access to a smartphone," he said.

"We want to change that." Low-cost phones powered by Android have proven popular in developing markets, but have been vexed by "fragmentation" because handset makers customize the software to suit different hardware or set themselves apart from rivals.

The variations result in popular third-party applications typically not working across the array of Android devices, frustrating users who want the latest fun, hip or helpful mobile mini-programme.

Android One software for low-priced smartphones in emerging countries could bring some consistency across devices, according to Gartner consumer technology research director Brian Blau.

"Google really needs to have a solution for emerging markets with low-cost devices," Blau told AFP.

"It is going to be a long, tough road to have an impact there; it is going to take years to bring the next two to three billion people onto the internet."

Google is collaborating with handset makers and others in the industry to field affordable smartphones that are high quality and come with reasonably priced data plans.

Handsets will be made by Google partners and launch with an initial range of "sub-$100" smartphones.

"We've long wondered what potential could be unleashed if people everywhere had access to the latest technology and the world's information," Pichai said. "It's time to find out."

Google and Silicon Valley rival Facebook have made priorities out of connecting with people in parts of the world where internet connectivity is scan, unreliable or just non-existent.

Having more people tune into websites or services mean expanded opportunities to make money from online advertising or providing tools that connect shops with customers.

Google does not make money from hardware, with its own branded gadgets meant to set standards and show off software capabilities with an eye toward inspiring electronics manufacturers to raise their games when it comes to Android or Chrome devices.

Developing countries have become prime targets for smartphone makers, and Android software made available free to handset makers has proven to be popular with budget-conscious buyers.

The news came a day after Microsoft said it would sell an Android-powered Nokia smartphone at a price of $135, a device also apparently aimed at emerging markets customers.

In April, Google acquired Titan Aerospace, a maker of solar-powered drones that could be used to boost internet access to remote areas.

Google also is developing Project Loon, which uses large balloons for transmitting internet signals to regions that are not currently connected.

"They are to some degree becoming an ISP (Internet service provider) because they have to," Blau

-TOI