Wednesday, October 14, 2009

China, Russia agree multi-billion dollar trade deals

Russia's Prime Minister Vladimir Putin held talks with Chinese counterpart Wen Jiabao in Beijing Tuesday, as the two countries agreed to bilateral economic and trade deals worth $4 billion, Chinese state media reported.
Russian and Chinese flags flying at Tiananmen Gate in honor of Vladimir Putin's visit to Beijing.

Russian and Chinese flags flying at Tiananmen Gate in honor of Vladimir Putin's visit to Beijing.

Wen hosted a welcome ceremony for Putin at the Great Hall of the People at the start of a three-day visit, before their private talks and a larger session involving ministers from both sides, Xinhua said.

"Russia and China have become genuine and comprehensive strategic and cooperative partners in recent years," Putin was quoted by Xinhua as saying.

Bilateral relations have become stable and mature since the forging of diplomatic ties 60 years ago and particularly the establishment of the Russia-China strategic cooperative partnership in 1996, Wen told reporters.

Russian Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Zhukov said the deals included two $500-million-dollar banking deals -- one involving Russia's Vnesheconombank (VEB) and the China Development Bank and the other between Russia's VTB bank and the Agricultural Bank of China, Agence France-Presse reported.

Chinese and Russian negotiators also met Tuesday "to exchange views on China-Russia energy cooperation," according to a Chinese foreign ministry statement.

In April, the two countries signed agreements on oil cooperation, while a memorandum of understanding on natural gas cooperation in followed in June.

But negotiations over the pricing of the gas have reportedly remained a major obstacle to a final deal, AFP said.

However, Chinese Vice Premier Wang Qishan, who met with Zhukov at a joint economic forum earlier Tuesday, told reporters that the China-Russia oil pipeline project was going smoothly and the loan China pledged to Russia had been implemented, Xinhua said.

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The construction on the China section of an oil pipeline from Siberia started in May. The 1,030-kilometer (640-mile) pipeline runs from Skovorodino, Russia, to the city of Daqing in northeastern China.

China makes India unhappy, again

The tension continues to build between India and China.

After the war of words on Tuesday over Arunachal Pradesh, the new point of conflict is China's business plans in Pakistan-Occupied Kashmir (PoK).

Chinese President Hu Jintao has assured Pakistan that China will continue to engage in projects inside PoK.

Not ok, says India. "Pakistan has been in illegal occupation of parts of the Indian state of Jammu & Kashmir since 1947. The Chinese side is fully aware of India's position and our concerns about Chinese activities in Pakistan occupied Kashmir," said External Affairs Ministry spokesman Vishnu Prakash. India has asked China to stop business in PoK in view of "long-term relations."

On Monday, the Chinese president met with the Pakistani Prime Minister and said ""Howsoever, the international situation may change, the people of China and Pakistan are always joined in hearts and hands." The Chinese President outlined a major project to upgrade the Karakoram highway connecting the two countries overland and offered Chinese help in the Neelam-Jhelum hydroelectric project in PoK.

The new warning from India comes a day after China said it's furious with Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's visit to Arunachal Pradesh 11 days ago. India dismissed the protest by clarifying that Arunachal Pradesh is a part of India, and politicians are free to visit it whenever they want. India said it was "concerned and disappointed" by China's remarks about the prime minister's visit. External Affairs Minister SM Krishna also reiterated that despite Chinese protests, the Dalai Lama will visit Arunachal soon, but will refrain from making any political comments there. ......... See more news-http://www.ndtv.com/news/india/tension_continues_to_build_between_india_and_china.php

Friday, August 28, 2009

Govt to allow retail sale of Tamiflu

The government has decided to allow retail sale of Tamiflu, an antiviral drug that slows the spread of non-resistant strains of the influenza virus between cells in the body.

The notification for retail sale of Tamiflu will be coming in a few days from now. Six companies have been granted licence for making and distributing Tamiflu.

Tamiflu is one of two antiviral drugs said to be effective in treating the A/H1N1 flu virus that has reached pandemic levels worldwide.

Friday, July 24, 2009

US corruption probe nets dozens

More than 40 people, including politicians, officials and several rabbis have been arrested in a major FBI operation in the US.

Three hundred agents raided dozens of locations in New Jersey and New York as part of a 10-year probe into corruption and money laundering.

Three mayors from the state of New Jersey and two members of the state legislature were among those held.

One man is accused of kidney trafficking involving Israeli donors.

Prosecutors say the arrests were part of a "dual-tracked" investigation.

Acting US Attorney Ralph Marra told reporters there were 29 suspects on what he termed the "public corruption" side of the investigation, including the politicians.

On the other side, he said, there were 15 suspects in connection with alleged international money-laundering, including the rabbis and their "associates".

Prosecutors accuse one man of dealing in human kidneys from Israeli donors for transplant for a decade.

It is alleged that "vulnerable people" would give up a kidney for $10,000 (£6,000) and these would then be sold on for $160,000 (£97,000).

Informant

Officials say investigations originally focused on a network they allege laundered tens of millions of dollars through charities controlled by rabbis in New Jersey and neighbouring New York.

ARRESTED
Hoboken Mayor Peter Cammarano
Secaucus Mayor Dennis Elwell
Jersey City Deputy Mayor Leona Beldini
Ridgefield Mayor Anthony Suarez
State legislator Harvey Smith
State legislator Daniel Van Pelt
Rabbi Eliahu Ben Haim, Deal, NJ
Rabbi Saul Kassin, Brooklyn, NY
Rabbi Edmund Nahum, Deal, NJ
Rabbi Mordechai Fish, Brooklyn, NY

Investigators used an informant to approach a group of rabbis from the Syrian Jewish community in Brooklyn and the New Jersey borough of Deal for help hiding his assets.

The rabbis cashed cheques he made out to charities they oversaw and paid the money back to him, minus a cut, investigators say.

The probe then widened to include alleged official corruption with links to a New Jersey construction boom.

The informant was introduced to a series of politicians and powerful local officials. Posing as a developer, he offered bribes to return for favourable treatment.

State legislators Harvey Smith and Daniel Van Pelt were arrested, as well as the mayors of some of the state's major cities and boroughs.

A number of city building, planning and fire inspectors were also held.

Mr Marra said: "It seemed that everyone wanted a piece of the action. The corruption was widespread and pervasive. Corruption was a way of life for the accused."

He said politicians had "willingly put themselves up for sale" and clergymen had "cloaked their extensive criminal activity behind a facade of rectitude".

'Misunderstanding'

The BBC's Jane O'Brien says the money laundering ring reportedly spanned the US, Israel and Switzerland.

Jon Corzine, the Governor of New Jersey, said: "The scale of corruption we're seeing as this unfolds is simply outrageous and cannot be tolerated."

Ed Kahrer, an FBI agent who has worked on the investigation from the start, said: "New Jersey's corruption problem is one of the worst, if not the worst, in the nation.

"It has become ingrained in New Jersey's political culture," he said.

Another FBI agent said: "The list of people we arrested sounds like it should be the roster for a meeting of community leaders, but sadly they weren't meeting in a boardroom this morning, they were in the FBI booking room."

Most of those arrested have been released on bail.

Hoboken Mayor Peter Cammarano was accused of taking a bribe. His lawyer said he intended to fight the charge "with all his strength until he proves his innocence".

A lawyer for 87-year-old Rabbi Saul Kassin of Brooklyn said it was a shame his client had been "caught up in this misunderstanding".

Correspondents say the number of people arrested is large even by New Jersey standards, where more than 130 public officials have either admitted to corruption or been found guilty of it since 2001.

Modi can be questioned for '02 riots: High Court

New Delhi: The Gujarat High Court on Friday rejected a petition which sought a stay on the Special Investigation Team (SIT) from questioning Chief Minister Narendra Modi and 62 others in a 2002 communal riot case.

The petition was filed by former BJP MLA Kalu Maliwad, who challenged the Supreme Court’s order asking the SIT to “look into” a complaint by Zakia Jafri, wife of former Congress MP Ehsan Jafri, who was among those burnt alive in Gulberg Society in Ahmedabad in 2002.

Zakia Jafri has made accusations against Modi and 62 others, including senior bureaucrats and police officers, and demanded a fresh investigation into their role in the Gulberg Society massacre.

Maliwad claimed that the Supreme Court had not issued any specific direction to the SIT, and the probe team doesn’t have the power to summon or question the accused.

At least 1,180 people, mostly Muslims, died in riots in Gujarat which began after a train carrying Hindu activists was set ablaze at the Godhra railway station in 2002. The cause of the fire has not been clearly established with two government-appointed panels giving differing versions.

The SIT, which has been set up on the Supreme Court’s order, comprises former Central Bureau of Investigation director R K Raghavan., former director general of Uttar Pradesh Police C D Satpathy and three IPS officers from Gujarat: Geeta Johri, Shivanand Jha and Ashish Bhat.

Could You be Hacked Like Twitter?

The French hacker who broke into Twitter's Google Apps and stole more than 300 private company documents has revealed in detail how he did it. Using a method known as "cracking," the man who goes by the name Hacker Croll was able to break down Twitter security by trolling the Web for publicly available information, according to TechCrunch. Eventually, Croll found one weakness many of us are guilty of -- using one password for everything -- and Twitter's security was compromised. Read on to see how Hacker Croll did it, and consider whether access to your digital life could be breached by his methods.

Croll Cracks Twitter

Hacker Croll started by building a profile of his target company, in this case Twitter. Basically, he assembled a list of employees, their positions within the company, and their associated e-mail addresses. After the basic information was accumulated, Croll built a small profile for each employee with their birth date, names of pets, and so on.

After Croll had created these profiles, he just went about knocking on doors until one fell down. That's exactly what happened when he did a password recovery process for a Twitter employee's personal Gmail account. Croll discovered that the secondary account attached to this person's Gmail was a Hotmail account. The problem was that Hotmail account had been deleted and recycled due to inactivity -- a longstanding policy on Hotmail. Now, all Hacker Croll had to do was reregister the Hotmail account for himself, go back and do the Gmail password recovery, and then Gmail sent the password reset information straight to the bad guy.

But it's not over yet. Gmail asked Hacker Croll to reset the password of the Twitter employee's personal e-mail account, which he did. But now the original user was locked out of their account, which would send up an obvious red flag. So all Croll did was search the Gmail account itself for passwords from the person's other active services. Then he entered a commonly used password he'd found, and waited to see if the person began using their account normally. Croll now had access to the Gmail account from behind the scenes, and was able to access information undetected. Making life even eaiser, the Twitter employee used the same password on her business and personal accounts, so the hacker now had access to both, and the rest was history.

Are You Vulnerable to the Same Crack?

The alarming thing about Croll's methods is they could happen to anyone. I checked my own Google account last week, and discovered I was open to the same security flaw the Twitter employee was. I had registered my Gmail account so long ago, that I'd forgotten all about my secondary e-mail address. Just like the Twitter employee, the secondary email attached to my Google Account was defunct and possibly open to re-registering by anyone. That has since been changed. I also did a search within my own email for passwords I've used, and I was amazed at how many results were returned. Do a search in your e-mail account using your most common passwords, and see what turns up. You might be surprised.

But there are a myriad of other ways a hacker could get your information. Have you ever received a Happy Birthday greeting on a public service like Twitter? Have you ever sent someone your phone number or any other information that way? What information is sitting on your social networking sites? Are your MySpace and Facebook accounts closed off, or can anyone view them who searches for you? Does your Facebook page have your birthdate, the past schools you've attended, your pet's name? Could your mother's maiden name -- a common security question -- be discovered through your social network account? What about the myriad of other services you use? If you think it's unlikely that someone could find this information, then try searching for yourself in the so-called "Deep Web" search engines like Pipl or Spokeo and see what comes up. You may find online accounts you'd completely forgotten about.

Webmail Security Similar

The other problem is that most of the major e-mail services use similar recovery methods to Google's. Hotmail is almost exactly the same as Gmail. Yahoo is even easier, since if you tell Yahoo you can't access your secondary e-mail account you can answer a secret question. Those security measures are what made it possible for a student to hack hack into Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin's Yahoo Mail account last year. In my tests of Yahoo Mail's recovery page, I got what seemed like an unlimited number of opportunities to guess my Yahoo Mail secret question. AOL Mail isn't much better, since you have a choice of entering your secondary e-mail (you have to know it or guess) or you can enter your exact birthdate plus your Zip code on file with AOL. The Zip code barrier makes it harder for someone to break in, but by no means impossible.

If you've discovered you're open to the same flaws that Twitter was, then consider this your wake-up call. You must regularly check the security settings on your various online accounts so that you remain in control of your security information since it's so easy to forget what you entered years ago. Pay special attention to secondary e-mail accounts connected to your primary e-mail address; consider giving a bogus answer (that only you remember) to security questions; and regularly change your passwords, either by your own invention or with a random password generator like GRC or Strong Password Generator. You could also get away from using just one or two passwords, and use password managers like Clipperz, KeePass or Yubico to remember your details instead. But perhaps most importantly, search for the most common passwords you use in your own webmail accounts and delete those messages. If the worst happens and your account is compromised, you'll be glad you did.

Google Chrome OS: Does the World Need Another Operating System?

When Google first launched its Chrome Web browser, many of us immediately saw Chrome as Google’s extension of an operating system. Now, that prophecy is fulfilled with news of Google’s plans to open-source the Chrome OS code later this year with view to have it available in the second half of 2010. But immediately, this raises fundamental questions about what, exactly, defines an operating system, and what will distinguish Android, the open-source mobile OS spearheaded by Google, from Chrome OS.

I can’t help but wonder if we’ll look back on this news and think of it as the start of the next Great OS Wars. Google says its goal is to improve the user experience with computers -- and clearly, that’s possible given the laundry list of annoyances with today’s PC-based experience. Mobile is driving innovation, too: The iPhone, Android, and WebOS mobile OS experiences have already shown us the potential when hardware integrates with elegant and well-designed software. While Microsoft Windows has competition in Apple’s Mac OSX and Linux, the truth is that Windows has really been competing against itself. Sure, Mac OS X's evolution has put pressure on Microsoft, but PC users have routinely turned to either Windows XP or Windows Vista (reviled though it may be) for their computing needs. Consider the netbook world: Mediocre Linux distributions installed on early netbooks had difficulty selling, because shoppers wanted the Windows environment on their netbook, not some merely functional, Linux-based Windows wannabe.

Fast forward to the introduction of Android. The Linux-based Android debuted just a few months after Apple introduced its sharp iPhone OS 2.0 with App Store support. And mobile OSes have been the hot topic ever since: When we most recently examined the mobile OS landscape, we noted that Apple’s iPhone OS 3.0 edged out Palm’s WebOS and Google’s Android -- for now. It gained points for its smooth interface, ease of use, and its wide application support. Palm’s WebOS also gets bonus points for its interface and strong ties into Web-based services, including Google’s own calendar and e-mail. And Android gets plenty of attention, too: Its pretty-face design (though, WebOS and iPhone are prettier still) and interface makes it highly competitive with WebOS and iPhone OS 3.0, and its connectivity and integration with Google’s Web services (calendar and e-mail, but not Google Docs) made me take notice when I reviewed the first Android phone to hit the market last fall, the T-Mobile G1.

The key thing to remember is that even though these mobile operating systems are tied tightly with their handset hardware, they are not necessarily limited to smart phone handsets. Rumors of a Google operating system based on Android have been circulating for a while now, and already we’ve seen reports of planned netbooks that will run Android (Acer’s Aspire One is due in the fall). In fact, smart phones are nothing more than low-powered, highly portable computers, often running ARM or similar processors -- the same processors found in so-called smartbooks, and soon to be found in some netbooks, perhaps, as well.

The idea of an Android-based netbook OS is not new then, and makes the news of Google Chrome all the more unsurprising. However, why Android? What’s to stop WebOS for making a go of it on a larger, more powerful device than the Palm Pre? Why wouldn’t Apple pipe its iPhone OS 3.0 (based on the same kernel as Mac OS X) to a tablet or other portable device? Thus far, the sort of Google-to-Web integration we’ve seen from Android on smart phones, and from Chrome on the PC, just hasn’t seemed all that unique.

For example, the current Chrome browser for Windows gives some insight into the blurring lines between desktop and Web browser. Chrome lets you create shortcuts on your Windows PC to any Web page or Web application, for example (this feature is not yet available in the Mac version of Chrome). When Chrome first came out, this felt fresh. Now, however, I’m less impressed -- Apple’s iPhone OS 3.0 lets me do that, too, on my iPhone 3GS.

Chrome OS vs. Current Options

Before I can understand the value of a Google-owned, Chrome-based operating system, I’d have to understand what it offers to me as a user that will be different from any of the options available to me today. In Google’s blog posting announcing Chrome OS, the company notes “Google Chrome OS is a new project, separate from Android. Android was designed from the beginning to work across a variety of devices from phones to set-top boxes to netbooks. Google Chrome OS is being created for people who spend most of their time on the Web, and is being designed to power computers ranging from small netbooks to full-size desktop systems. While there are areas where Google Chrome OS and Android overlap, we believe choice will drive innovation for the benefit of everyone, including Google.”

I spend most of my time on the Web, but the above, admittedly early, description does nothing to help differentiate Android from Chrome OS. Indeed, I question the language: Android users are more likely than anyone to be heavily tied into the Web, given the always-on connectivity on mobile devices.

So, what, exactly, might be the difference between Android and Chrome OS, and how might that challenge Windows? Presumably, for Chrome OS to truly be a competitive option to Windows 7 on full-blown laptop and desktop configurations, you’d need for Chrome to have wide device driver support for components and peripherals -- a sandbox Google hasn’t really played in before. Without such device support, Google could run into issues with far-flung devices such as printers or graphics cards. The company might even need Windows virtualization for Chrome OS: After all, users who rely on Windows apps might still need to access those apps on any Google-based device.

And speaking of apps, while Google notes that apps for Chrome OS would work on any other browser, it still opens questions about what the advantage of a browser-based app would be to begin with. Look at what happened with Apple’s attempt at browser-based apps: It fizzled and was completely forgotten once iPhone OS 2.0 hit last summer with full support for locally-stored applications. Chrome OS may have an early advantage that the iPhone lacked, in that HTML 5 has support for locally-stored data for Web apps; however, this yet-to-be implemented approach still might not help you if you're at 38,000 feet over Lincoln, Nebraska, and don't have any Web access.

High Hopes

Another statement from Google got my attention: “We hear a lot from our users and their message is clear--computers need to get better. People want to get to their email instantly, without wasting time waiting for their computers to boot and browsers to start up. They want their computers to always run as fast as when they first bought them. They want their data to be accessible to them wherever they are and not have to worry about losing their computer or forgetting to back up files. Even more importantly, they don't want to spend hours configuring their computers to work with every new piece of hardware, or have to worry about constant software updates.”

These points are true, especially the one about software updates. But I don’t know anyone who’ll want to only store data in the cloud; nor do I know anyone who would use a device as a primary computer if it won't work with the host of devices one might attach. And to assume that a new Google OS won’t require constant software updates is a bit presumptive: Google has pushed out Android updates big and small; and Apple is continually updating is iPhone OS 3.0.

I do think that Android and Chrome OS can have a place on devices, and I believe these will give competing operating systems, mobile or otherwise, a run for their money -- if, and only if they have apps that provide cross-platform compatibility with the Windows universe. But I’m not convinced that even Google can challenge Windows (or Mac OS X for that matter) on netbooks or larger devices. The device and software compatibility issues loom large here. And until Google can sell users on the advantages of its Chrome OS over other competitive options, I think the company could have an uphill struggle for carving out the niche it clearly has targeted with Android and Chrome on mobile and non-PC devices.

Microsoft Windows 7, Google Chrome OS, the first netbook with Android -- these are just a few of the interlinked developments we have to look forward to in the third quarter of the year. It’s going to be a busy fall, after all.

How to Learn Anything on the Web

Looking to start a business, get a degree, or learn Michael Jackson's Thriller dance? The Web has a class, video, or tutorial to help you do it. Here's where to get started.

A tutorial or class for almost everything and anything is available online these days. Whether you're looking to beef up your résumé with some new skills, to get a degree while waiting for the job market to pick up, or simply to have a little fun learning something new, the Web has a wealth of educational resources--many of them free of charge.

To give you some ideas, we've put together a list of sites in several categories, from skills for budding entrepreneurs and learning foreign languages to gourmet cooking and the choreography for Michael Jackson's iconic Thriller dance.

You can always Google for anything you don't see here, but be careful as you click. In researching this story, I ran into many sites that either tried to sell me classes (with little or no real free instruction) or were infested with pop-ups and adware. Antimalware software is a must

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Telugu actress Meena's Marriage on July 12' 09


Meena is finally getting hitched. 33-year-old Meena was recently engaged to Bangalore based businessman Vidyasagar at a private ceremony in Chennai. And the marriage date has been fixed on July 12th. The alliance is arranged by her parents. Meena who entered into films as child artiste has acted in about 150 films and has maintained gossip-free personal life. She is currently shooting for Telugu film

Polling to 85 Lok Sabha seats tomorrow

NEW DELHI: As many as 9.46 crore voters are eligible to exercise their franchise in the fourth phase of Lok Sabha polls tomorrow in which the fate

Rajnath Singh, Congress' Pranab Mukherjee, SP chief Mulayam Singh Yadav and RJD supremo Lalu Prasad would be decided.

A total of 1,315 candidates, including 119 women, are in the fray in this penultimate phase of elections that will witness polling to 85 Lok Sabha seats in eight states and union territories.

Votes will be cast across 1.29 lakh polling booths, which would be manned by over six lakh election officials. Polling would be held between 0700 hrs and 1700 hrs.

At the end of the fourth phase, elections would be completed to 457 of the 545-member Lok Sabha. Polls are held only to 543 seats, as two members are nominated from the Anglo-Indian community.

Some of the prominent candidates in this phase of polls include NC's Farooq Abdullah, Congress' Kapil Sibal (Chandni Chowk), Sachin Pilot (Ajmer), Shekhar Suman (Patna Saheb), Ajay Maken (New Delhi), BJP's Shatrughan Sinha (Patna Saheb), HJC's Bhajan Lal (Hisar) and RLD's Ajit Singh (Baghpat).

Polling to all the 25 seats in Rajasthan, 10 in Haryana and seven in Delhi will be completed at one go.

HCL Leaptop Z39

HCL Infosystem has launched new notebook.HCL Leaptop Z39 has a core 2 duo processor, a 8GB RAM and 500 GB HDD. It has a DVD Dual layer super multi drive, 2MP video camera and a 14.1 in screen.

The company claims that the product consumes less electricity than any other laptop in its genre.It uses the Windows Vista premium edition and has integrated Bluetooth, microphones and Ethernet. It has a battery life of 4 hours and Energy Star 4.o Category A certification with an ability to consume below 1.7W of energy in sleep mode and less than 1W in stand-by mode.

Other features are 2.0 megapixel video camera with dual internal microphone, an integrated Bluetooth v2.0, a 4-in-1 card reader, Ethernet and built-in speaker system.

The HCL Leaptop Z39 features Advanced Thermal Engineering (ATE) Technology which is designed for Indian conditions. This ensures that the surface temperature on the keyboard and the left and right palm rest is not more than 6 degree Celsius than the ambient temperature, thereby ensuring comfort in working for long hours.

The price has been fixed at Rs 59,990. The HCL Leaptop Z39 notebook is available with a lifetime 24×7 telephonic support in 11, regional languages throughout the country.

Google's Internet bus rolls into Karnataka

Bangalore (IANS): How to browse the net, search, e-mail, social networking, browse maps or track stock market trends - this is what global web-based search engine Google is going to teach people as its custom-built Internet bus drives through 15 towns of Karnataka to expose the people to the digital world.

The bus, which began its journey Monday, will course through the state for the next 50 days.

After a successful two-month tour of 17 towns across Tamil Nadu from December to February, the Google bus began its Karnataka leg Monday from Kolar, a backward district, about 100 km from India's tech hub.

"The Internet bus project is an attempt to educate the people, especially the younger generation about the worldwide web and how Internet serves as a platform to step into the digital world for information, communication, entertainment and education," Google India research and development (R&D) head Prasad Ram said.

The Interent-enabled bus has a video-driven content to showcase how people can make their everyday life simpler by accessing information in multiple formats - data, audio and video through English or local language (Kannada).

The content is tailored to familiarise the common folk with the basics of Internet. The online tool facilitates access to multiple services such as search, e-mail, social networking and browsing maps.

Among the Karnataka towns the Google bus will travel through over the weeks are Mandya, Mysore, Hassan, Shimoga, Chikmagalur, Chitradurga, Davanagere, Hubli-Dharwad, Belgaum, Hospet and Tumkur.

"Tamil Nadu was a big learning for us. It was inspiring to see the people wanted to know about the Internet and share their needs with us. The experience has reinforced our belief that awareness is the key challenge in the growth of the Internet in India," Ram recalled.

In this phase, Google will focus on how mobile phones can be used to access even local information without data plans. Access to the Internet in local language will be its thrust area.

The benefit of the bus project is evident from a couple of instances during its sojourn in Tamil Nadu. A short tour of the Google bus made elderly parents at Krishnagiri to buy a computer for chatting and emailing with their son working overseas.

Similarly, a young businessman at Cuddalore, once a school dropout, learnt to track the stock market movements by browsing the relevant information or data links through the Internet.

"In Coimbatore, a boy who sold flowers for a living and had no exposure to the Internet learnt about Google Maps, Google Earth and Google Search in his native language (Tamil) by stepping into the bus," Ram noted.

The project is in line with Google's global strategy to make access to information, education and entertainment universal and relevant to end-user in English or multiple languages.

"Search has become more local with useful information on business listings, railways and flight status, cricket scores, movie review and et al. Our applications like SMS search, SMS channels and map maker have made Google the most sought after vehicle (engine) for millions in India and the world over," Ram claimed.

Access to information over mobile devices has become easier with mobile maps, mobile search, and mobile Orkut.

Google has also created platforms like the 'Be NetSmart' campaign to educate students, parents and teachers on Internet safety.

After travelling through Karnataka towns, the Internet bus will drive into other states across the country for similar exposure over the ensuing months.

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Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Apple Plans To Launch Netbook With Touch Screen-Sources

Apple Inc. (AAPL) is planning to launch a netbook computer with a touch screen monitor as early as the second half of this year, two people close to the situation told Dow Jones Newswires Tuesday.
The mini laptop computers will likely have monitor screens that are between 9.7-inches and 10-inches, one person, who declined to be named, said.
Another person said other specifications and functions are still under evaluation.
Apple is working with Taiwan's Wintek Corp. (2384.TW), a contract manufacturer of small and medium displays, to make the touch-screen displays and Quanta Computer Inc. (2382.TW), the world's largest notebook maker by revenue, to assemble the new netbooks, the second person said.
Netbooks are primarily designed for Internet browsing and mobile computing. They cost less than conventional laptop computers, and are lighter and smaller.
A slew of PC makers including Dell Inc. (DELL), Hewlett-Packard Co. (HPQ) and Acer Inc. (2353.TW) have in recent months entered this market segment. The companies are hoping to tap new computer users in emerging markets.
Apple's entry may come in what is expected to be a very tough year for computer sales. Desktop-computer shipments in particular are expected to fall by nearly one-third globally in 2009 as consumers increasingly shift to laptop computers, according to projections released by research firm Gartner Inc. earlier in March.
While netbook computers have become a major sales driver for computer companies, Apple Chief Executive Steve Jobs last year dismissed netbooks, even going so far as to suggest Apple's third-generation iPhone - a smartphone device that offer multifunctions - could serve as a netbook. Jobs told analysts in October Apple isn't "tremendously worried" the slump will drive customers to less-expensive PCs and added, "we don't know how to make a $500 computer that's not a piece of junk."
Jill Tan, a spokeswoman for Apple in Asia, declined to comment Tuesday. Wintek spokeswoman Susie Lee and Quanta Computer investor relations officer Carol Hsu declined to comment.
Apple, like many other big personal-computer and consumer-electronics brands, doesn't actually make most of its products. It hires manufacturing specialists - mainly companies from Taiwan that have extensive operations in China - to assemble its gadgets based on Apple's designs.
The arrangement frees Apple and its fellow vendors from running complicated, labor-intensive production lines, while the ability of Taiwanese companies to slash manufacturing costs helps cut product prices over time.
Quanta assembles Apple's MacBook and iMac computers.
Shares of Wintek and Quanta rose on the news. Wintek shares rose 6.9% to NT$ 11.70, while Quanta shares gained 4.4% to NT$37.60. The broader market closed up 0.9%.
But Yuanta Securities analyst Vincent Chen said the share price gains may be limited as orders from Apple may not be large.
"Apple is unlikely to make very cheap products. The netbook would most likely be very niche, meaning volume is going to be small."

Unfair deal for women candidates in LS polls?

Women candidates in the lists announced by major political parties till now are few and far between. Their representation is nowhere close 33 per cent, which the Women's Bill hopes to achieve. The worst off till now is the CPM. Its list of 60 candidates, interestingly announced on the Women's Day, has only three women candidates.Out of Congress' 24 candidates announced in Uttar Pradesh, only five are women.BJP's list of 166 candidates so far has 26 women. That's just a little over 15 per cent.Samajwadi Party has only 6 women candidates out of 71.

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IPL will be responsible for players' security: Modi

In a press conference, IPL chief Lalit Modi has made it clear that the IPL is on and said that the IPL schedule is being fine-tuned every minute. It will continue to be the mega-event it has been billed to be. He also said that IPL opening ceremony in Mumbai will take place on April 10 and tickets are likely to go on sale from next week.Tournament
will now move to new venues of Ahmedabad and Vishakapatnam. IPL is still trying to get a confirmation from Dharamsala to host matches, he said.As far as player security is concerned during the tournament, Modi said IPL will be responsible for security of Indian and foreign players till the end of the tournament. He said foreign players would be given security from the moment they land in India to the moment they leave the country. He also clarified that not a single player has contacted IPL over tournament security.IPl will be coordinating with state governments for security and 90 per cent of states have approved IPL's new schedule.Modi announced that IPL has a contracted revenue of Rs 10,970 crore this year.Earlier, the Home Ministry received the revised schedule which has since been forwarded to the police establishments of the 8 states that will be hosting matches. However, there still seems to be considerable confusion with the IPL saying the government clearance is on track and the ministry saying they're yet to give a final clearance. Most of the states also continue to have reservations about hosting matches scheduled close to the polling dates.The involved in the IPL are Delhi, Punjab, West Bengal, Maharshtra, Tamil Nadu, Andhra, Karnataka and Rajasthan.

Kasab to attend court trial through video conferencing

Mumbai / Porbander, March 10 (ANI): Kasab, the lone gunman captured alive in the 26/11 Mumbai attack would stand trial on March 23, a local court said on Monday. A metropolitan magistrate's court said the trial would begin before the special session court set up inside the high-security Arthur Road prison.
The court also turned down Kasab's request to provide Urdu translation of the charge sheet running into over 11,000 pages, a plea made by two other accused.

Satyam founder in federal crime bureau custody

The founder of fraud-hit Satyam Computer Services and four others have been sent to the custody of India's federal crime bureau for investigation into the country's biggest corporate scandal, the bureau said.
Ramalinga Raju, his brother and former Satyam managing director Rama Raju, and chief financial officer Vadlamani Srinivas will remain in the custody of the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) for seven days from Tuesday, following a court order, the CBI said.
Two former officials from Satyam's auditing firm Price Waterhouse, S. Gopalakrishnan and Srinivas Talluri, have also been sent to CBI custody by a court in the southern Indian city of Hyderabad, it said in a statement on Monday.
Satyam has been battling for survival since Ramalinga Raju resigned as chairman on Jan. 7, revealing profits had been overstated for years and that $1 billion of cash and bank balances on the company's books did not exist. The five men were all arrested later that month.
The CBI took over the fraud investigation last month from the police in Andhra Pradesh state, whose capital is Hyderabad.
The bureau's statement said several documents related to the case had been collected and witnesses had been examined.
Satyam kicked off a bidding process on Monday to sell a majority stake to regain the confidence of its clients and staff, and two potential suitors quickly confirmed they would join the race for the tainted outsourcer

Friday, March 6, 2009

IPL on, but with a new schedule: Lalit Modi

Mumbai, March 6 (IANS) The Indian Premier League (IPL) will soon have a new schedule, IPL chief Lalit Modi said here Friday and stressed that the tournament was on.
'We will shortly have a new schedule out,' Modi told reporters, adding that there would be no matches on the day of the counting - May 16.
'We want to assure our fans that the IPL is on. There is no question of the IPL moving to another country,' he said, adding that they were working on a schedule, which was a 'cumbersome process'

Thursday, January 29, 2009

Google lets users search for Internet blockers

Google Inc on Wednesday unveiled a plan aimed at eventually letting computer users determine whether providers like Comcast Corp are inappropriately blocking or slowing their work online.
The scheme is the latest bid in the debate over network neutrality, which pits content companies like Google against some Internet service providers.
The ISPs say they need to take reasonable steps to manage ever-growing traffic on their networks for the good of all users. Content and applications companies fear the providers have the power to discriminate, favoring some traffic over others.
Google will provide academic researchers with 36 servers in 12 locations in the United States and Europe to analyze data, said its chief Internet guru, Vint Cerf, known as the "father of the Internet."
"When an Internet application doesn't work as expected or your connection seems flaky, how can you tell whether there is a problem caused by your broadband ISP (Internet service provider), the application, your PC (personal computer), or something else?" Cerf wrote in a blog post.
The effort aims to uncover the problem for users, Cerf said. Cerf is widely known for his work for the US government in designing the Internet protocol in the 1970s and 1980s.
In a precedent-setting decision last year, the five-member Federal Communications Commission voted to uphold a complaint accusing Comcast of violating the FCC's open-Internet principles by blocking file-sharing services, such as those that distribute video and television shows.
The case became a flash point in the Net neutrality debate. Comcast is fighting the decision in the courts.
COX MAKES MOVE
In a move likely to fuel further debate, another large cable company, Cox Communications, said on Wednesday it would begin testing a plan to give priority to time-sensitive traffic like Web page views and streaming videos.
Less time-sensitive traffic, such as file uploads and peer-to-peer file sharing, could be delayed under the plan.
Cox said it will not discriminate based on owner or source of traffic.
Still, Net neutrality advocates are wary of such policies.
"The lesson we learned from the Comcast case is that we must be skeptical of any practice that comes between users and the Internet," said Ben Scott, policy director of Free Press, an advocacy group.
Researchers are already using tools to test connection speed and determine if an ISP is blocking or throttling particular applications. Google's effort will allow an expansion of that effort.
"The goal is to let consumers see what's under the hood of their Internet connection," said Sascha Meinrath, a wireless expert at the New America Foundation, a think tank in which Google CEO Eric Schmidt is board chairman. "Right now it's very difficult now to make an informed consumer choice."
Google has a business interest in keeping users' experiences fast and efficient, said Google policy analyst Derek Slater, who reserved further judgment until he could learn more about the new Cox policy.
"Our ability to innovate still depends on end users being able to use their broadband connections to access Google. To the extent that consumers are having problems doing that, that can directly hurt Google."

Friday, January 23, 2009

SLUMDOG MILLIONAIRE movie review



Cast: Dev Patel, Anil Kapoor, Freida Pinto, Irrfan Khan and Saurabh Shukla
Director: Danny Boyle
Producer: Producer
Music: AR Rahman

Forget the Oscar nominations, the Golden Globe wins, the rousing reception at dozens of film festivals and the approximately $60 million grossed so far. Slumdog Millionaire is inherently a Bollywood film. I mean that in the best sense of the word.

Slumdog is unapologetically life-affirming, fantastical and totally implausible.

For years, Bollywood directors have aspired to create a Hindi Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon. That is a Hindi film that can shatter barriers of language, geography and sensibility and connect across the globe. Slumdog Millionaire is that film. Only its creator isn’t Indian, he's British.


Slumdog Millionaire is director Danny Boyle’s passionate love letter to the city of Mumbai. Danny and his cinematographer Anthony Dod Mantle perfectly capture the grime, grotesqueness and frayed glory of our maximum city.

It’s a horrifying, Dickensian space in which children are casually orphaned, mutilated and prostituted. But it’s also a space in which an improbable love story, which has its origins in a totally Hindi film-like childhood romance, finds a happy ending.

Working from the novel by Vikas Swarup, Danny and his writer Simon Beaufoy have essentially turned the Bollywood film on its head.

So, instead of realistic emotions tethered to an unrealistic landscape and plot, we have an unrealistic plot tethered to a hyper-realistic landscape. Mantle’s camera pores over Mumbai, from its over-arching high-rises to its filthiest slums.

But the story that takes place here is pure fairy tale. So Jamal Malik, a chaiwalla at a call center, played by Dev Patel, is on the brink of winning the top prize on Kaun Banega Crorepati.

The show’s arrogant and creepy host Prem Kumar, played terrifically by Anil Kapoor, has Jamal arrested because he is sure that Jamal is cheating. But as the police interrogate him, we go into a series of flashbacks and discover how and why the slumdog has all the right answers.

At one point in the film, the police inspector, who has been listening to Jamal’s story remarks "It is bizarrely plausible". Actually it’s not. Would the Mumbai police, for all its corruption and brutality, torture a young boy only because he may have cheated on a quiz show. Would a famous talk show host publicly belittle a winning contestant only because he is poor? I don't think so.

There are many places in which the film stretches credulity to snapping point but Danny tells the his story with such a propulsive momentum that you can’t stop watching or ask 'how can this happen'. The visuals are superb and even when the plot wobbles, the acting stays on target.


Three sets of actors play the three leads - Jamal, his brother Salim and the love of his life, Latika. The child actors Ayush Mahesh Khedekar, Azharuddin Mohammed Ismail and Rubina Ali, are the lifebloods of Slumdog. They are excellent. Their section is the best part of the film. Dev Patel has an endearing presence but a shaky accent and Frieda Pinto, playing Latika, seems more fashion model than slumdog.

Unfortunately, the two also have to exchange dialogue that might make Karan Johar cringe. At one point Jamal says to Latika, "Come away with me". She asks, "...and live on what?" to which he replies, "On love". Eventually then, Slumdog Millionaire isn’t a great film but it is an immensely pleasurable one. As Veeru said in Sholay, "is story main emotion hai, drama hai, tragedy hai". What more can you ask for? Slumdog Millionaire is a must-watch. I strongly recommend that you see it.

IGate interested in buying Satyam: CEO

IGate Corp, an outsourcing services provider, has informed the new board of Satyam Computer Services that it would be interested in buying the fraud-hit outsourcer, its chief executive said on Friday.
"We would be interested in buying Satyam, assuming we can figure out what their liabilities are," Phaneesh Murthy said in telephone interview.
"We believe the board is going to come with their own strategy ... if the strategy involves sale of the company then we will be interested in it."
IGate, which has about $65 million of cash, is in touch with private equity firms for possible funding of any deal, he said.
But IGate would not be interested in buying Satyam, which is fighting for survival after a revelation of massive accounting fraud, if its liabilities were more than $1.25 billion.

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Obama may not be taking oath on Lincoln's Bible after all!

Washington, Jan 20 (ANI): The Lincoln Bible to be used by Barack Obama to take oath as the 44th President of the United States, may not belong to the Lincoln family.

"They call it the Lincoln Bible. It is in tolerably good condition. While it is in good condition, it's not really the Lincoln family Bible," claimed Clark Evans of the Library of Congress.

With the Civil War about to erupt and an assassination threat in Baltimore, Lincoln arrived in Washington in the middle of the night. His belongings and his Bible were still en route, CBS News reports.

It could be possible that Abraham Lincoln showed up for his first inauguration without a Bible, and the then Chief Justice there to swear him in, sent him and his clerk to get one.

"That's a very likely scenario for what happened,"" Evans said, showing the current Lincoln Bible. "And ... this is what he brings back."

The clerk of the Supreme Court, William Thomas Carroll, brought back one of the many Bibles he kept for official use - then signed and sealed it, the report said.

On that day, Lincoln spoke to a nation in crisis, about to split in two. And on Election Night, Obama echoed Lincoln's words.

For inspiration, Obama has been reading Lincoln's second inaugural address, said John Sellers, a Lincoln curator at the Library of Congress.

In Abraham Lincoln's rise from nothing and in his determination, Barack Obama sees a model - to inspire, to guide and to unite.

The Obamas to pick their White House furniture from presidential treasure trove

Washington, January 20 (ANI): The Obama family will be allowed to select from among thousands of pieces of furniture located in a secret, 40,000-square-foot warehouse in Maryland, for use in the White House.

According to reports, the First Family will have their choice of any presidential sofa, table or chair that is still in working order.

The exact location of the warehouse has not been revealed.

Presidents and their families have dipped into the treasure trove for years.

"I remember Rosalynn Carter found in White House storage some child-size furniture that had been given to the White House during Caroline Kennedy's time," the Washington Times quoted former White House curator Betty Monkman as saying.

Miss Monkman, now in her early 60s, worked in the office of the White House curator from 1967 to 2002, and in 1997 was appointed chief curator.

She has helped eight presidents and their families furnish the White House during her years in the office.

According to her, the storage facility houses everything from Theodore Roosevelt-era rugs to Harry S. Truman's bedside table.

"It's a historic record of everything that has been used in the White House over the last 200 years," she said.

Besides the pieces in storage, the new president also can borrow any painting from any of the national museums and hang them in either their private residence or the White House's West Wing.

The Obamas can choose furniture for any of the 132 rooms in the White House.

If the Obamas want something more contemporary, they can buy pieces using money that Congress appropriates.

The Obamas will get a 100,000 dollars budget, and any spending on decorations beyond that will need to be financed from private sources.

Obama is the biggest ever assassination target in American history'

London, Jan 20 (ANI): Barack Obama, who will become the 44th President of the US today, is the biggest ever assassination target in American history.

According to the Daily Star, the 47-year-old has taken the responsibility of doing the most important job in the world, which is to save the global economy from meltdown, but it is also the most dangerous.

He will enter the White House as the first black president knowing that white supremacists have vowed to kill him.

And therefore, security-surrounding Obama has been stepped up.

CIA chiefs are throwing a ring of steel around his inauguration to make sure he does not meet the same fate as assassinated 1960s president John F Kennedy.

They have turned Washington DC into an impenetrable fortress for the historic ceremony. It will be guarded by 45,000 soldiers, police, secret agents and National Guards.

Jet fighters will also be on standby for the ceremony.

Obama will be protected behind bullet-proof glass and ride in a bomb-proof limo with the Ku Klux Klan, neo-Nazis and al-Qaida all gunning for him.

US military leaders have tried to cater for every possible type of terror strike from a gunman to a chemical attack.

Intelligence chiefs, who have reported a huge increase in threats running up to inauguration day, have placed snipers on every rooftop around Washing-ton's Lincoln Memorial and Capitol Hill, where Obama will deliver his first speech as US head of state.

Leaders of the racist KKK have issued a call for members to wear black armbands and fly the US flag upside down in protest at him taking office.

And FBI assistant director Joe Persichini confirmed the white supremacy movement is itching to take out Obama.

Monday, January 19, 2009

Madonna nude Photo Gallery

After a star reaches a certain point, it's easy to forget what they became famous for and concentrate solely on their persona. Madonna is such a star. Madonna rocketed to stardom so quickly in 1984 that it obscured most of her musical virtues. Appreciating her music became even more difficult as the decade wore on, as discussing her lifestyle became more common than discussing her music. However, one of Madonna's greatest achievements is how she manipulated the media and the public with her music, her videos, her publicity, and her sexuality. Arguably, Madonna was the first female pop star to have complete control of her music and image.
Madonna moved from her native Michigan to New York in 1977, with dreams of becoming a ballet dancer. She studied with choreographer Alvin Ailey and modeled. In 1979, she became part of the Patrick Hernandez Revue, a disco outfit that had the hit "Born to Be Alive." She traveled to Paris with Hernandez; it was there that she met Dan Gilroy, who would soon become her boyfriend. Upon returning to New York, the pair formed the Breakfast Club, a pop/dance group. Madonna originally played drums for the band, but she soon became the lead singer. In 1980, she left the band and formed Emmy with her former boyfriend, drummer Stephen Bray. Soon, Bray and Madonna broke off from the group and began working on some dance/disco-oriented tracks. A demo tape of these tracks worked its way to Mark Kamins, a New York-based DJ/producer. Kamins directed the tape to Sire Records, which signed the singer in 1982.
Kamins produced Madonna's first single, "Everybody," which became a club and dance hit at the end of 1982; her second single, 1983's "Physical Attraction," was another club hit. In June of 1983, she had her third club hit with the bubbly "Holiday," which was written by Jellybean Benitez. Madonna's self-titled debut album was released in September of 1983; "Holiday" became her first Top 40 hit the following month. "Borderline" became her first Top Ten hit in March of 1984, beginning a remarkable string of 17 consecutive Top Ten hits. While "Lucky Star" was climbing to number four, Madonna began working on her first starring role in a feature film, Susan Seidelman's Desperately Seeking Susan.
Madonna's second album, the Niles Rodgers-produced Like a Virgin, was released at the end of 1984. The title track hit number one in December, staying at the top of the charts for six weeks; it was the start of a whirlwind year for the singer. During 1985, Madonna became an international celebrity, selling millions of records on the strength of her stylish, sexy videos and forceful personality. After "Material Girl" became a number two hit in March, Madonna began her first tour, supported by the Beastie Boys. "Crazy for You" became her second number one single in May. Desperately Seeking Susan was released in July, becoming a box office hit; it also prompted a planned video release of A Certain Sacrifice, a low-budget erotic drama she filmed in 1979. A Certain Sacrifice wasn't the only embarrassing skeleton in the closet dragged into the light during the summer of 1985 -- both Playboy and Penthouse published nude photos of Madonna that she posed for in 1977. Nevertheless, her popularity continued unabated, with thousands of teenage girls adopting her sexy appearance, being dubbed "Madonna wannabes." In August, she married actor Sean Penn; the couple had a rocky marriage that ended in 1989.
Madonna began collaborating with Patrick Leonard at the beginning of 1986; Leonard would co-write most of her biggest hits in the '80s, including "Live to Tell," which hit number one in June of 1986. A more ambitious and accomplished record than her two previous albums, True Blue was released the following month, to both more massive commercial success (it was a number one in both the U.S. and the U.K., selling over five million copies in America alone) and critical acclaim. "Papa Don't Preach" became her fourth number one hit in the U.S. While her musical career was thriving, her film career took a savage hit with the November release of Shanghai Surprise. Starring Madonna and Sean Penn, the comedy received terrible reviews, which translated into disastrous box office returns.
At the beginning of 1987, she had her fifth number one single with "Open Your Heart," the third number one from True Blue alone. The title cut from the soundtrack of her third feature film, Who's That Girl?, was another chart-topping hit, although the film itself was another box office bomb. 1988 was a relatively quiet year for Madonna as she spent the first half of the year acting in David Mamet's Speed the Plow on Broadway. In the meantime, she released the remix album You Can Dance. After withdrawing the divorce papers she filed at the beginning of 1988, she divorced Penn at the beginning of 1989.
Like a Prayer, released in the spring of 1989, was her most ambitious and far-reaching album, incorporating elements of pop, rock, and dance. It was another number one hit and launched the number one title track as well as "Express Yourself," "Cherish," and "Keep It Together," three more Top Ten hits. In April 1990, she began her massive Blonde Ambition tour, which ran throughout the entire year. "Vogue" became a number one hit in May, setting the stage for her co-starring role in Warren Beatty's Dick Tracy; it was her most successful film appearance since Desperately Seeking Susan. Madonna released a greatest-hits album, The Immaculate Collection, at the end of the year. It featured two new songs, including the number one single "Justify My Love," which sparked another controversy with its sexy video; the second new song, "Rescue Me," became the highest-debuting single by a female artist in U.S. chart history, entering the charts at number 15. Truth or Dare, a documentary of the Blonde Ambition tour, was released to positive reviews and strong ticket sales during the spring of 1991.
Madonna returned to the charts in the summer of 1992 with the number one "This Used to Be My Playground," a single featured in the film A League of Their Own, which featured the singer in a small part. Later that year, Madonna released Sex, an expensive, steel-bound soft-core pornographic book that featured hundreds of erotic photographs of herself, several models, and other celebrities -- including Isabella Rossellini, Big Daddy Kane, Naomi Campbell, and Vanilla Ice -- as well as selected prose. Sex received scathing reviews and enormous negative publicity, yet that didn't stop the accompanying album, Erotica, from selling over two million copies. Bedtime Stories, released two years later, was a more subdued affair than Erotica. Initially, it didn't chart as impressively, prompting some critics to label her a has-been, yet the album spawned her biggest hit, "Take a Bow," which spent seven weeks at number one. It also featured the Björk-penned "Bedtime Stories," which became her first single not to make the Top 40; its follow-up, "Human Nature," also failed to crack the Top 40. Nevertheless, Bedtime Stories marked her seventh album to go multi-platinum.
Beginning in 1995, Madonna began one of her most subtle image makeovers as she lobbied for the title role in the film adaptation of Andrew Lloyd Webber's Evita. Backing away from the overt sexuality of Erotica and Bedtime Stories, Madonna recast herself as an upscale sophisticate, and the compilation Something to Remember fit into the plan nicely. Released in the fall of 1995, around the same time she won the coveted role of Evita Peron, the album was comprised entirely of ballads, designed to appeal to the mature audience that would also be the target of Evita. As the filming completed, Madonna announced she was pregnant and her daughter, Lourdes, was born late in 1996, just as Evita was scheduled for release. The movie was greeted with generally positive reviews and Madonna began a campaign for an Oscar nomination that resulted in her winning the Golden Globe for Best Actress (Musical or Comedy), but not the coveted Academy Award nomination. The soundtrack for Evita, however, was a modest hit, with a dance remix of "Don't Cry for Me Argentina" and the newly written "You Must Love Me" both becoming hits.
During 1997, she worked with producer William Orbit on her first album of new material since 1994's Bedtime Stories. The resulting record, Ray of Light, was heavily influenced by electronica, techno, and trip-hop, thereby updating her classic dance-pop sound for the late '90s. Ray of Light received uniformly excellent reviews upon its March 1998 release and debuted at number two on the charts. Within a month, the record was shaping up to be her biggest album since Like a Prayer. Two years later she returned with Music, which reunited her with Orbit and also featured production work from Mark "Spike" Stent and Mirwais, a French electro-pop producer/musician in the vein of Daft Punk and Air.
The year 2000 also saw the birth of Madonna's second child, Rocco, whom she had with filmmaker Guy Ritchie; the two married at the very end of the year. With Ritchie as director and Madonna as star, the pair released a remake of the film Swept Away in 2002. It tanked at the box office, failing to crack seven digits, making it one of the least profitable films of the year. Her sober 2003 album, American Life, fared a little better but was hardly a huge success. That same year she released a successful children's book, The English Roses (it was followed by several more over the coming years). Confessions on a Dance Floor marked her return to music and to the dance-oriented material that had made her a star; released in late 2005, it topped the Billboard charts, and was accompanied by a worldwide tour in 2006, the same year that I'm Going to Tell You a Secret, a CD/DVD made during her Re-Invention Tour, came out. In 2007 Madonna released another CD/DVD, Confessions Tour, this time chronicling her controversial tour of the same name. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide

Sensex firms up by 58 points due to better buying trends

Mumbai, Jan 19 (ANI): The Bombay Stock Exchange added 58.19 points in trading on Monday morning.
Buying activity was supported by Hong-Kong share prices opening 1.9 percent higher on Monday.
The 30-share index gained 276 points in earlier session.
Likewise, the National Stock Exchange's Nifty rose by 16 points to 2,844.
Investors buying activity was also better due to the confidence on Barack Obama holding the U.S office soon and Wall Street end-of-week gains

Satyam 'one-off delinquency': Kamal Nath

New Delhi, Jan 19 (IANS) Commerce Minister Kamal Nath continued to maintain that the Rs.70 billion fraud at Satyam Computer Services was a 'one-off delinquency', though Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has called it a 'blot' on India's corporate image.
'One cannot smear the Indian corporate sector. Such exceptions have happened in other parts of the world also - and they have been treated so,' Kamal Nath told the 'Partnership Summit 2009' referring to the financial fraud at the Hyderabad-headquartered IT major.
'It is a one-off delinquency and an exception in India's corporate sector,' he told the summit organised by the Confederation of Indian Industry (CII), adding: 'India has high standards of corporate governance.'
Satyam is facing a major financial mess and a serious threat in continuing its operations because of the Rs.70 billion fraud, admitted two weeks ago by its founder and former chairman B. Ramalinga Raju.
'I want to assure you that India's corporate sector has good corporate governance norms,' Kamal Nath told the packed Durbar Hall of Taj Palace Hotel here, which included delegates from nearly 20 countries.
The minister's comments came barely two days after Manmohan Singh told an awards function of a leading business daily that the Satyam scam was a 'blot' on India Inc's image and that the government would unravel the plot and punish the guilty.
'The Satyam episode is a blot on our corporate image. It indicates how fraud and malfeasance in one company can inflict suffering on many and can also tarnish India's image more broadly,' the prime minister had said.
'The government is determined to unravel the full nature of the fraud and punish those involved under the due process of law,' he had said at The Economic Times Awards function at the Trident Hotel in Mumbai, attended by the who's who of India Inc.

Astro speak: What s in store for Katrina in 2009?
















Beginning her career with modeling, Katrina Kaif, paved her way to Bollywood with her debut movie 'Boom'. The fair damsel reached the heights of success with her movie 'Namastey London'. Well known for her love affair with Salman Khan, she has made her mark in Bollywood with back to back hits. But, Will she have a good run at the box office in 2009? Ganesha predicts her coming year based on her Surya Kundali

Microsoft charged with monopoly abuse

Microsoft is harming competition by bundling Internet Explorer with Windows, according to a new ruling by the European Commission.
"Microsoft's tying of Internet Explorer to the Windows operating system harms competition between web browsers, undermines product innovation and ultimately reduces consumer choice," says a statement from the Commission.
The verdict comes at the end of a year-long investigation that was instigated at the behest of rival Opera software. The charges were officially delivered as a Statement of Objections to Microsoft's Redmond headquarters last Thursday, and the company now has eight weeks to respond.
Microsoft says it is studying the commission's preliminary findings, and may request a formal hearing.
European Commission and Microsoft. Five-years ago, the company was fined over 1.6 billion euros for similiar offences. This was followed by an 899 million euro fine last year for late compliance.
Opear was jubliant on the verdict: "On behalf of all internet users, we commend the Commission for taking the next step towards restoring competition in a market that Microsoft has strangled for more than a decade," says Jon von Tetzchner, CEO of Opera Software.
"The Commission's Statement of Objections demonstrates that the Commission is serious about getting Microsoft to start competing on the merits in the browser market and letting consumers have a real choice of internet browsers," he says.
Opera says it is still waiting to see if the Commission will pursue its second charge against Microsoft, that it is undermining open software standards on the internet.
Internet Explorer is still the world's most dominant browser, despite its market share dipping below 70% in 2008 as Firefox gains ground. According to web analytics company Net Applications, Opera currently holds around 0.71% of the global market

Microsoft Loses E.U. Antitrust Case

BRUSSELS, Jan. 16 -- The European Union said Friday that Microsoft's practice of selling the Internet Explorer browser together with its Windows operating system violates E.U. antitrust rules.
It ordered the software giant to untie the browser from its operating system in the 27-nation E.U.
"Microsoft's tying of Internet Explorer to the Windows operating system harms competition between web browsers, undermines product innovation and ultimately reduces consumer choice," the E.U. said in a statement.
It gave Microsoft eight weeks to respond, adding that the company can defend its position in a hearing if it finds that useful.
Microsoft issued a statement saying, "We are committed to conducting our business in full compliance with European law."
The commission's investigation into Microsoft's Web-surfing software began a year ago, after the Norwegian browser-maker Opera Software filed a complaint. Opera argued that Microsoft hurt competitors not only by bundling the software, in effect giving away the browser, but also by not following accepted Web standards.
That meant programmers who built Web pages would have to tweak their codes for different browsers. In many cases, they simply designed pages that worked with market-leading Internet Explorer but showed up garbled on competing browsers.
At the time of the complaint, Opera said it was asking E.U. regulators to either force Microsoft to market a version of Windows without the browser, or to include other browsers with Windows.
The European Commission upheld Opera's complaint, adding that a yearlong probe led it "to believe that the tying of Internet Explorer with Windows -- which makes Internet Explorer available on 90 percent of the world's PCs -- distorts competition."
Friday's announcement by the European Commission means Microsoft must alter its marketing practices in Europe and risks a large fine.
Microsoft is no stranger to E.U. antitrust officials. In 2004, the European Court of Justice found the company had violated E.U. antitrust rules by trying to damage rivals for server and media player software.
The court fined Microsoft more than $600 million and ordered it to offer a version of Windows in Europe without the Media Player software and to share communications code with rivals.
Microsoft lost an appeal of that ruling Sept. 17, 2007.
Although Microsoft is a U.S. company, it must meet E.U. antitrust rules if it wants to do business in the European Union. E.U. antitrust rules prohibit companies from abusing a dominant market position.