Archive for the 'INTERNET' Category

Repairs Complete on 2 Internet Cables

Tuesday, February 12th, 2008
Traffic has returned to normal on undersea Internet cables in the Mediterranean Sea and Persian Gulf that were cut last month, causing disruptions across the Middle East and parts of Asia, cable owner FLAG Telecom said Monday. Repair ships completed work over the weekend on both the FALCON cable in the Persian Gulf 35 miles north of Dubai and the FLAG Europe-Asia cable about 5 miles north off the Egyptian port city of Alexandria, U.K.-based FLAG said in a statement on its Web site. The Gulf cable carries Web traffic between Oman and the United Arab Emirates, and the Mediterranean cable carries it from Africa to Sicily. FLAG, which stands for Fiber-Optic Link Around the Globe, earlier said an abandoned anchor caused the Persian Gulf cut, but it provided no details. The other cut is still being investigated, the company said. It remained unclear Monday whether a third cable that parallels FLAG’s Mediterranean cable — it’s called South East Asia-Middle East-West Europe 4 cable and is owned by a consortium of 16 companies — has been repaired. The consortium could not be reached, and FLAG did not work on that cable. The cuts slowed businesses, hampered personal Internet usage and caused a flurry of speculation, including mentions of sabotage. Government authorities and FLAG refused to comment on the speculation. The incident underlined the threats that Internet disruptions could pose to organizations and businesses worldwide. Large-scale Internet disruptions are rare, but East Asia suffered nearly two months of outages and slow service after an earthquake damaged undersea cables near Taiwan in December 2006. source: google news http://www.currentnewsaffairs.com http://blogs.mindbodynsoul.com   Tags:

Cell phones quickly becoming portable entertainment devices

Monday, December 31st, 2007

All of the entertainment options that are hot on the PC—social networking, web video, user-generated content—are downright torrid on the smallest of screens, the cell phone. New research from Deloitte & Touche finds that 47 percent of 25-41 year olds use their cell phones for entertainment, a massive surge from the 29 percent who said they did so only eight short months ago. And where the eyeballs go, there go both the ad dollars and the aspirations of many businessmen.

The Hollywood Reporter has prerelease numbers from Deloitte’s “State of the Media Democracy” report, and those numbers show surging growth in using cell phones for more than chatting. 20 percent of those polled said that they watch video on their phone daily or almost daily. Since that’s an average, we have to assume that the number is far higher among 13-24 year olds, 62 percent of whom now say they use their cell phones as entertainment devices. That sort of growth naturally attracts entrepreneurs who want to capitalize on the popularity of Internet-enabled mobile devices. Money can be made either by selling content directly or by selling ads on content that consumers want to view (but not badly enough to pay for). So far, advertising on mobile devices has been hampered by consumer resistance and small screen sizes, but the Deloitte study makes clear that consumers are willing to endure even intrusive ads in return for content they want. Yea verily, we are a nation of cheap sods. Content owners have been accustomed to locking down the experience on mobile devices, but opening a full connection to the web (which the iPhone, for instance, does superbly) necessarily removes much of that control. Mobile operators that have been able to offer proprietary video and chatting services (among others) at premium prices will increasingly find themselves competing with free, ad-supported offerings delivered through a device’s Internet connection. The pressure will hopefully be enough to push back strongly against proprietary lock-in and DRMed offerings. But ad-supported services on cell phones have their drawbacks, too, and some companies are hesitant to jump in. A phone can still feel uniquely personal, making the most lucrative form of advertising (highly specific, even location-based targeting) feel intrusive. The Associated Press is running an article on that very problem, in fact. After all, no advertiser wants to annoy potential customers. “It’s proceed with caution,” said Burst Media’s CEO, Jarvis Coffin, in the piece. “Are consumers going to be spooked by the idea that suddenly their phone goes beep and it’s a Starbucks offer, and they are standing next to a Starbucks?” Short answer: yes. Still, like anything else in the world, people will probably get used to more invasive cell phone ads. Google, a supremely talented data aggregator and ad sales company, has been pushing hard to enter the mobile space, rolling out projects like Android and preparing to bid on wireless spectrum early next year. Other companies are following suit. How much privacy will users be willing to trade for cheap cell phone plans or free services? We’ll start to find out next year.   source: google news http://blogs.mindbodynsoul.com http://www.currentnewsaffairs.com  
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Minnesotas_Jat connection

Thursday, October 25th, 2007

Senator Chaudhary believes that agriculture is a binding force  Ishani Duttagupta 

   HE’S the man behind the improbable sounding sibling alliance between our own Haryana and the US state of Minnesota. But then, Satveer Chaudhary, who was elected to the house of representatives in Minnesota in 1996, holds many records. 

   When he was first elected state representative, Mr Chaudhary, who belongs to the Minnesota Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party, became the first Asian member of the Minnesota legislature. In 2000, he became the first Asian-Indian senator in American history. After he was re-elected to the Minnesota senate in 2002, he also became the Minnesota senate’s youngest member at 33 and currently serves as majority whip. Very proud of his Jat roots, Mr Chaudhary was the moving force behind the sister-state partnership agreement between Haryana and Minnesota that was signed during the current visit of Minnesota Governor Tim Pawlenty to India. “This partnership - which is the first of its kind between a US and an Indian state - has business advantages for both. Minnesota is increasingly seen as a state with a vibrant business climate which is very similar to Haryana. But it’s not just business, culturally too both the states have a lot in common. Minnesota and Haryana are traditionally agricultural states and that gives us common ground not just in terms of economy but also in terms of culture,” says Mr Chaudhary. As for his achievements, he’s very modest and feels that there are high and low points for everyone who chooses a career in politics. 

   “However, I’ve never dwelt on my ethnic minority status or seen my Indianness as a disadvantage in reaching out to people,” he says. He also feels that most Indian-Americans who are in politics have had to work with mainstream causes. “From Swati Dandekar and Kumar Barve to Jay Goyal, no one has really been able to find an ethnic Indian constituency. All of us, who have become legislators in the US, have had to represent the mainstream,” he says. 
   As for
Minnesota, though the state doesn’t have a very large Indian population, Mr Chaudhary feels that Indians such as Gopal K Khanna, who’s Minnesota’s first chief information officer, are making a big impact. “Minnesota is also home to Indian businessmen such as Mahendra Nath, CEO of Nath Companies, who have done the Indian community proud,” he says. He also sees a bright future for Indian companies that are setting up shop in his state. The fact that his state doesn’t have a large number of Indians doesn’t bother him. “New York and San Francisco are like the covers of the US and you can’t judge a book by its covers. I would like Indians to delve into the heart of the US, which is well represented by my state,” he says with pride. Sweet home Minnesota Source : Economic Times , Delhi , India     
 Comments : Very Well Described by Ishani Dasgupta -  Sweet home Minnesota www.commonwealthtv.tv                       Tags:

MICROSOFT UNVEILS NEW SURFACE COMPUTER

Friday, June 1st, 2007
SEATTLE - Microsoft Corp. has taken the wraps off “Surface,” a coffee-table shaped computer that responds to touch and to special bar codes attached to everyday objects.
The machines, which Microsoft planned to debut Wednesday at a technology conference in Carlsbad, Calif., are set to arrive in November in T-Mobile USA stores and properties owned by Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide Inc. and Harrah’s Entertainment Inc. Surface is essentially a Windows Vista PC tucked inside a shiny black table base, topped with a 30-inch touchscreen in a clear acrylic frame. Five cameras that can sense nearby objects are mounted beneath the screen. Users can interact with the machine by touching or dragging their fingertips and objects such as paintbrushes across the screen, or by setting real-world items tagged with special bar-code labels on top of it. Unlike most touchscreens, Surface can respond to more than one touch at a time. During a demonstration with a reporter last week, Mark Bolger, the Surface Computing group’s marketing director, “dipped” his finger in an on-screen paint palette, then dragged it across the screen to draw a smiley face. Then he used all 10 fingers at once to give the face a full head of hair. With a price tag between $5,000 and $10,000 per unit, Microsoft isn’t immediately aiming for the finger painting set. (The company said it expects prices to drop enough to make consumer versions feasible in three to five years.) Some of the first Surface models are planned to help customers pick out new cell phones at T-Mobile stores. When customers plop a phone down on the screen, Surface will read its bar code and display information about the handset. Customers can also select calling plans and ringtones by dragging icons toward the phone. Guests sitting in some Starwood Hotel lobbies will be able to cluster around the Surface to play music, then buy songs using a credit card or rewards card tagged with a bar code. In some hotel restaurants, customers will be able to order food and drinks, then split the bill by setting down a card or a room key and dragging their menu items “onto” the card. At Harrah’s locations, visitors will be able to learn about nearby Harrah’s venues on an interactive map, then book show tickets or make dinner reservations. Microsoft is working on a limited number of programs to ship with Surface, including one for sharing digital photographs. Bolger placed a card with a bar code onto Surface’s surface; digital photographs appeared to spill out of the card into piles on the screen. Several people gathered around the table pulled photos across the screen using their fingertips, rotated them in circles and even dragged out the corners to enlarge the images — behavior made possible by the advanced graphics support deep inside Windows Vista. “It’s not a touch screen, it’s a grab screen,” Bolger said. Historically, Microsoft has focused on creating new software, giving computer programmers tools to build applications on its platforms, and left hardware manufacturing to others. (Some recent exceptions include the        Xbox 360 and the Zune music player, made by the same Microsoft division that developed Surface.) For now, Microsoft is making the Surface hardware itself, and has only given six outside software development firms the tools they need to make Surface applications. Matt Rosoff, an analyst at the independent research group Directions on Microsoft, said in an interview that keeping the technology’s inner workings under wraps will limit what early customers — the businesses Microsoft is targeting first with the machine — will be able to do with it. But overall, analysts who cover the PC industry were wowed by Surface. Surface is “important for Microsoft as a promising new business, as well as demonstrating very concretely to the market that Microsoft still knows how to innovate, and innovate in a big way,” said Michael Gartenberg, an analyst at Jupiter Research. source : associated press http://blogs.mindbodynsoul.com http://www.mindbodynsoul.com Tags:

A prosecution-defence nexus in BMW case?

Wednesday, May 30th, 2007
NDTV telecast a ’sting’ operation on Wednesday night purporting to show a collusion between the prosecution and the defence in the high-profile BMW hit-and-run case in which Sanjeev Nanda, grandson of a former Navy chief, is accused of running over and killing six persons while driving a BMW car nearly eight years ago. The channel showed with the help of a hidden camera R K Anand, one of the leading criminal lawyers in the country and the counsel for Nanda in the case, talking to a prosecution witness Sunil Kulkarni about the case. Kulkarni discusses money transaction with Anand who told the channel that the witness was a blackmailer and that he had laughed at his demand for money when he suddenly approached him at the Delhi airport. Anand said everything is fabricated. The channel claimed that Kulkarni had met the defence lawyer a second time but Anand denied that. According to the expose, public prosecutor I U Khan asked Kulkarni if he had met ‘bade sahib’. Kulkarni told the channel that the reference was to Anand. NDTV said that they had been approached by Kulkarni after watching the channel’s expose on the BMW case. He claimed he was under great pressure from the defence and the prosecution to change his original statement and he offered to prove this on hidden camera. But just before the testimony began, he withdrew his initial consent, the television channel said. Anand said that he had told the Delhi High Court that Kulkarni should not be examined because he is a blackmailer and “he has been blackmailing us for so many years”. source : PTI. http://blogs.mindbodynsoul.com http://www.mindbodynsoul.com Tags:

DARK CHOCOLATE

Tuesday, May 29th, 2007
  It’s true that certain types of chocolate are good for the cardiovascular system - but certainly not all chocolate. When it comes to good health, the most important thing is to choose dark chocolate versus milk chocolate. The darker the chocolate, the richer it is in flavonoids (also known as bioflavonoids) — which are responsible for most of chocolate’s health benefits. Also - milk inhibits intestinal absorption of flavonoids, so you lose even more of these fabulous plant chemicals during digestion if you choose milk chocolate. Step 1: Cocoa Content When buying dark chocolate look for 70% cocoa content. Very dark chocolate can be an acquired taste, though, so play around with different brands until you hit on one you like.
Step 2: Fat Content The type of fat listed in the ingredients is important. You want to avoid products that contain palm oil or coconut oil or milk fat, and choose ones that are made from “cocoa butter”. Even though they’re all saturated fats, “cocoa butter” has a neutral effect on cholesterol levels, while the other two can raise your blood cholesterol. If you’re watching your weight, remember even the darkest of dark chocolate is a treat you should eat in moderation because it’s caloric. One ounce contains about 150 calories. source : yahoo news http://blogs.mindbodynsoul.com http://www.mindbodynsoul.com Tags:

American Idol winner announced

Thursday, May 24th, 2007
A 17-year-old from Arizona yesterday became the youngest ever winner of American Idol, after viewers cast a record 74 million votes. Jordin Sparks beat Blake Lewis, 25, to the top spot on the US’s most watched television show after the singer captured the hearts of viewers with her bubbly personality and big voice. The two finalists embraced after host Ryan Seacrest announced the winner of the sixth season of the contest, with Sparks, dressed in a long, flowing gold gown, having difficulty catching her breath. “Thank you so much for everything — Mom and Dad, I love you!” said the emotional teenager, who along with the American Idol title will receive a recording contract.   “It just turned out pretty cool, I guess,” she said, giggling. Ms Sparks, who is from Glendale, Arizona, and is the daughter of a former National Football League player, Phillippi Sparks, started singing as a toddler and auditioned for American Idol as soon as she could after becoming eligible at the age of 16. After the show singer Smokey Robinson said: “She sings so good it’s hard to believe that she’s 17. To sing like that you would have to have lived for a long time.” Heading into the competition’s final week, many thought the show’s top title was up for grabs, with the British judge, Simon Cowell, saying viewers would have to decide between the better singer, Sparks, and the better entertainer, Lewis. The show, which has grown from a cheesy summer talent competition into a cultural phenomenon that draws about 30 million viewers twice a week, is a spin off from the British Pop Idol. In its first five seasons the show has produced a list of successful stars from both its winners and losers. Kelly Clarkson was a Grammy winner, winner Carrie Underwood became a Country Music Award winner and Jennifer Hudson, who failed to make the finale in 2004, won an Oscar and Golden Globe earlier this year for her performance in the movie Dreamgirls. In addition to transforming nobodies into stars, the programme has become a coveted forum for established artists to be seen. The star-studded event included performances by Gwen Stefani, Smokey Robinson, Gladys Knight and Green Day. Prince, Tony Bennett, Stevie Wonder and Mary J. Blige have also appeared on the show. About 100,000 people auditioned for this year’s show, which puts contestants through auditions and performances that showcase musical genres ranging from country to hard rock. The programme, on News Corp’s Fox network, first ran in the summer of 2002. There are three judges, the music producer Randy Jackson, the former pop star Paula Abdul and Cowell. They have contracts for another two seasons. Revenue from recordings by performers associated with the Idol franchise has exceeded $100 million. The show is broadcast live or tape-delayed to more than 100 nations outside the United States, including Pakistan, Israel, United Arab Emirates, China, Australia and South Africa. source : associated press http://blogs.mindbodynsoul.com http://www.mindbodynsoul.com Tags:

Oprah `stunned’ by dad’s plan for book

Wednesday, May 23rd, 2007
CHICAGO - Oprah Winfrey said she was “stunned” to learn her father plans to write a book about her.
“I was upset. I won’t say devastated, but I was stunned,” Winfrey told New York’s Daily News in a story published Tuesday. Winfrey said she laughed when one of her assistants told her the newspaper was calling to ask about a book her father Vernon Winfrey was writing. “I said, `That’s impossible. I can assure them it’s not true,’” she said. “… I called him and it turned out he is writing a book. The worst part of it was him saying, `I meant to tell you I’ve been working on it.’” Winfrey was living with her mother in Milwaukee when she was sent as a young teen to live with her father in Nashville. She previously has credited him for imposing discipline on her and stressing the importance of an education. The Daily News reported that the conversation with Winfrey took place Sunday, when she was in New York to receive the Elie Wiesel Foundation Humanitarian Award. Reached Tuesday, Michelle McIntyre, a spokeswoman for Winfrey’s Chicago-based Harpo Productions Inc., said: “We’re not going to issue any further comment.” Vernon Winfrey, who owns Winfrey Barber & Beauty Shop in Nashville, had left work Tuesday evening and was not available for comment. Winfrey told the newspaper she last saw her father when he accompanied her on a trip to Africa a few months ago, but that they often talk and she has a good relationship with him. “I would have preferred to have known my father was working on this. It would have been a nice gesture, a courtesy,” she said. Vernon Winfrey plans to call his book “Things Unspoken,” according to the newspaper.  
source :yahoo news http://blogs.mindbodynsoul.com http://www.mindbodynsoul.com Tags:

Three blasts rock Gorakhpur

Tuesday, May 22nd, 2007
Gorakhpur: A series of three bomb blasts on Tuesday rocked the temple city injuring six persons.
Initial reports said there were bomb blasts in Golghar Market, Jalkhal building and Ganeshpur crossing one after the other injuring six people nearby. Police said the crude bombs were kept in tiffin boxes in cycles.
The first bomb went off at around 6.40 p.m. and was followed by other two in gap of five minutes.
  source : press trust of india http://blogs.mindbodynsoul.com http://www.mindbodynsoul.com Tags:

Microsoft buys online ad company

Friday, May 18th, 2007
SAN FRANCISCO: Microsoft said Friday that it would buy the online advertising company aQuantive for about $6 billion, the latest in a flurry of deals for online advertising firms by big Internet and media companies. The all-cash deal is Microsoft’s largest acquisition ever and comes with an unusually large premium, underscoring just how critical Microsoft believes the acquisition is to its troubled efforts to become a major force in the fast-growing Internet advertising business. The price, $66.50 a share, is 85 percent more than aQuantive’s closing stock prince of $35.87 Thursday. “It puts us in the game, if you like,” said Chris Dobson, head of global advertising sales at Microsoft. “If you ever had any doubt that Microsoft was going to be big in the online advertising space, this should make it clear that it will.” The deal comes on the heels of Google’s recent agreement to buy DoubleClick for $3.1 billion, as well as the acquisitions of RightMedia by Yahoo and 24/7 RealMedia by the advertising company WPP Group. Microsoft, which had tried unsuccessfully to buy DoubleClick, faced competition for aQuantive, but was determined not to be outbid this time, executives said in a conference call. Based in Seattle, aQuantive has several major businesses. Its Atlas unit competes with DoubleClick and is used by advertisers and publishers to deliver ads online when users visit a Web page. The company also owns AvenueA/Razorfish, a leading interactive ad agency, and other digital businesses. Microsoft has struggled to compete in the online advertising market, particularly against Google, which dominates the field. Until now, Microsoft has sold ads on its MSN portal and used a technology called AdCenter to sell ads linked to Internet searches, a booming business, and the cornerstone of Google’s power. But Microsoft’s share of the search business has steadily declined, limiting the effectiveness of AdCenter. With aQuantive, Microsoft will be able to help sell and broker ads on sites across the Web, a business that is seen as increasingly important as advertising continues to shift online. The acquisitions of DoubleClick and RightMedia by Google and Yahoo were also intended to bolster those companies’ efforts to sell and broker ads on myriad Web sites. Microsoft has asked regulators to scrutinize the Google-DoubleClick deal, which it said would reduce competition. But Brad Smith, Microsoft’s senior vice president and general counsel, contended that Microsoft’s acquisition of aQuantive would promote competition. Forecasters at ZenithOptimedia, a media buying agency, predict that Internet ad spending will total $31 billion globally this year, a 28 percent increase from last year. In terms of market share, the Internet has already passed outdoor advertising, and will pass radio next year, Zenith Optimedia says. “We’re going to see people taking tens of millions of dollars out of television advertising and putting it into online, and that’s what all these guys are betting on,” said Shar VanBoskirk, an analyst at Forrester Research. The boom in Internet advertising is also reshaping the advertising pipeline, with online media owners like Google, Yahoo and Microsoft’s MSN increasingly moving into areas that used to be dominated by advertising companies like Omnicom Group, WPP and Publicis Groupe. In the offline world, there has generally been a clear distinction between media outlets and advertising agencies, which create the ads and buy time or space to run them. On the Internet, that line has been blurred, with portals like Google increasingly pushing into “upstream” areas like media planning and buying. “We’ve suddenly got two different sides that are competing in the same area, in the advertising companies and the media owners,” VanBoskirk said. There are signs of friction as online media owners like Google, with their deep pockets, expand. Google’s agreement to buy DoubleClick was criticized by Sir Martin Sorrell, chief executive of WPP Group who said it could trouble marketers. “It raises issues about whether we are prepared to give Google data that’s very valuable,” he said last month as WPP gave a quarterly financial update. “Clients will be concerned over the access Google may have to information that is owned by them.” While companies like 24/7 and DoubleClick focus primarily on distributing Internet advertising to online media owners, aQuantive gives Microsoft some broader capabilities. In addition to the Atlas ad serving platform, it also creates ads and plans media strategy, among other things, moving Microsoft into areas in which Google has not yet staked out a claim. “Today’s announcement represents the next step in the evolution of our ad network from our initial investment in MSN, to the broader Microsoft network including Xbox Live, Windows Live and Office Live, and now to the full capacity of the Internet,” Microsoft’s chief executive, Steven Ballmer, said in a statement. source : google news http://blogs.mindbodynsoul.com http://www.mindbodynsoul.com Tags: