1 "TAKE NO AS A QUESTION "

Tuesday, 25 March 2014

Google Now cards available to PC, Mac users

Google Now cards available to PC, Mac users

Google Now cards available to PC, Mac users
Google Now uses location information on a smartphone to serve relevant information.

NEW DELHI: Google Now, a service that claims to give Android and iOS users relevant information at the right time, is now available to PC and Mac users. Google was testing integration of Google Now, which shows cards with real-time information on weather or cricket score, with the beta version of Chrome browser for over a month and on Monday it announced that the service was available on the stable version of the browser. 

"If you use Google Now on your mobile device, you can see certain Now cards on your desktop computer if you're signed into Chrome, including weather, sports scores, commute traffic, and event reminders cards," explained Google. 

Google Now uses location information on a smartphone to serve relevant information. For PC and Mac users, the location information will be determined through a user's smartphone. The idea here is that if you are using a computer in your office, it is likely that you will have the smartphone with you and hence it will be useful to you if you get a Google Now card on the Chrome browser at 5.30pm, telling you the best way back to home so that you don't run into a traffic jam. Google Now, which can be accessed on most Android phones by pressing the home button and swiping upwards, shows information on traffic, local weather, news items and stocks that may interest you and sports scores. It also provides timely notifications. For example, if you have a meeting and if Google Calendar has the details of the meeting, Google Now is likely to give you a notification some time before the meeting, telling you the best way to reach the meeting venue. 

Google says that on PC and Mac even if Chrome browser is turned on, it will periodically check for the location of your smartphone "in order to continue showing you relevant Now cards". But it adds that if you want to turn it off, you can do it from the Chrome's notification centre, which can be accessed by clicking a bell-shaped button on the bottom right corner of the browser window
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More bang for buck: Insurers now pay

More bang for buck: Insurers now pay





Insurance.jpg
Star Health and Allied Insurance now cover over 200 day care procedures. Similarly, HDFC Ergo provides insurance for over 100 day care procedures. 

CHENNAI: Medical insurers have increased the number ofday care procedures covered in policies — a marked departure from the standard mediclaim norm that required hospitalization or 24 hours stay in a medical centre for the cover to come into force.

Star Health and Allied Insurance now cover over 200 day care procedures. Similarly, HDFC Ergo provides insurance for over 100 day care procedures. "Increasingly, health insurance covers are becoming more inclusive as the industry gains more experience from claims data and history," Mukesh Kumar, head, human resource, marketing and strategy planning, HDFC Ergo said.

Industry observers also state that another reason that fuelling the coverage of day care procedures is that mediclaim as a product is over 25 years old, having being conceived in 1985. "Over the years, advances in medical technology have ensured that many surgeries have become a day affair now and the list is only set to grow," Rahul Aggarwal, CEO of insurance advisory Optima Insurance Brokers said.

Added V Jagannathan, CMD of Star Health, "While mediclaim was built with checks and balances to ensure one was not taken for granted at the delivery point, over time, systems, records and technology have improved, which ensure a person can walk in and out of surgery on the same day itself."

Also, a push from the regulator Irda (Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority) last year urging insurers to launch more day care health insurance covers has also helped the cause. Also, under the new guidelines for health insurance issued last year, the regulator has laid down standard definitions of 46 commonly-used health insurance terms such as day care treatment, co-payment and domiciliary hospitals.

But while some day care surgeries can be more expensive on account of the latest technology, medical equipment and procedures (like minimally invasive ones), officials state it leads to better claims processing and management and thereby cost saving.

For instance, insurers don't have to grapple with the inclusion and exclusion component of room rent which would otherwise be necessitated on account of a long stay in hospital post recovery.

"From the insured standpoint, even though such surgeries can take put a large part of the sum insured in one go as they are more expensive, but there is costs savings from the bed charge and nursing standpoint. In fact, many hospitals now have separate day care procedure wards now," Renuka Kanvinde, associate vice president, health insurance, Bajaj Allianz General Insurance said.



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Google’s official cover damaging Nexus 7: Report


Google’s official cover damaging Nexus 7: Report

Google’s official cover damaging Nexus 7: Report
A recent report claims that Google's official folio cover for Nexus 7 (2013) tablet is damaging the device instead of protecting it.
NEW DELHI: As is the case with many gadget makers, Google sells accessories for the products it makes. However, a recent report has claimed that the official folio cover for the second-generation Nexus 7 tablet is damaging the device, instead of protecting it. 

In a report on Android Central, author Andrew Martonik said he noticed rust marks on the edges on his Nexus 7 (2013) unit after using it with the folio case for three months. 

"Deep reddish-orange lines all around the back of my tablet. Around all four corners, and everywhere there's a cutout on the case, a deep red line on my otherwise pristine black Nexus 7. I can scrub all I want, but the lines don't seem to want to come off," he noted. 

The reason behind the rusting is the flaw in design, according to the post. 

"The big culprit here is likely the slightly loose nature of the case because it has an open-backed design. The edges are pretty rigid and have a ribbed design on the inside to make them tough, but they flex just enough that they can move around on the tablet over the course of daily use. Everywhere the case can flex, it's leaving its mark on the back of the tablet," Martonik posted. 

Below is an image showing rusting at a corner:



While the folio case in this case was red in colour, Martonik warned that the black-coloured variant can do just as much harm to the second-generation Nexus 7 tablet. The folio case costs $49 in the US and Rs 3,299 in India and features a kick-stand.


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How Apple has changed under CEO Tim Cook


How Apple has changed under CEO Tim Cook

How Apple has changed under CEO Tim Cook
Since Cook took over as Apple's CEO, its annual revenue has grown by about 58%, and its profits by about 40%.

You could be forgiven, after reading 'Haunted Empire: Apple After Steve Jobs', for concluding that Apple is on the verge of going belly up. In the new book by Yukari I Kane, the company is depicted as having radically declined after the death of its former impresario. 

Under Timothy D Cook, who took over as chief executive shortly before Steve Jobs died in October 2011, Apple "teeters at the edge of a reckoning," Kane writes. Its executives, she adds,"cannot find their own way forward. They are tired. They are uncertain. The well of ingenuity has run dry." 

Cook said in a statement that it was all"nonsense." He's right.

There are two ways to assess how well Apple has done under Cook. You could look at its financial performance, which is boring but instructive. Or you could do as Kane does and instead sift through all the noise and commentary surrounding the company — observers' assessments of its shifting corporate culture, of its executives' temperaments during product-launch events, or the fact that such arbiters of taste as Mitch Albom, the author of 'Tuesdays With Morrie', no longer care for Apple's advertising. 

For the most part, Kane sticks with these more subjective assessments, and she arrives at a familiar set of conclusions. She argues that Apple has forgotten how to innovate, that its products are too closed and expensive, and that it is failing to live up to its own well-honed hype. These aren't novel critiques; they've been seen as evidence of Apple's imminent failure throughout its history, even under Jobs. And there isn't much evidence that they're any more true now than they were in the past. 

Cook's book
Let's start with the numbers. In the two and a half years since Cook took over as Apple's CEO, the company's annual revenue has grown by about 58%, and its profits by about 40%. That compares favourably with many of its rivals, including Google, whose profits increased by about 25% in the same period.

It's true that the growth in sales of Apple's biggest product, the iPhone, has slowed under Cook. Last holiday season, the company sold 51 million iPhones, an increase of about 38% since 2011, when Apple was selling the last iPhone that Jobs worked on.

That level of growth is slower than in periods under Jobs; for instance, between the holiday quarter of 2010 and the holiday quarter of 2011, iPhone sales rose by 130%. The iPhone's growth under Cook has also lagged that of the wider smartphone industry, which means that Apple's market share is in decline.

On the other hand, much of the growth in the wider smartphone business has occurred at the low end of the market. Consequently, under Cook, Apple's share of the profits in the smartphone business has actually gone up. When Jobs ran the company, Apple raked in about two-thirds of all the world's smartphone profits. Last holiday season, under Cook, analysts' estimates put Apple's share of smartphone profits at between 76% and 87%. 

Taken together, what do these numbers tell you about Apple under Cook? They paint a picture of a company doing very well, if not as spectacularly as it did at certain times in the recent past. They suggest that while Apple's growth might have slowed, it hasn't stalled.

The numbers certainly do not suggest a company in decline. At worst, you can say that Apple has entered a period of stasis — though if stasis means earning 80 cents of every dollar of smartphone profits, that can't be so bad.

And this analysis doesn't even get to the deeper question, which is how well Apple would have performed during the last two and a half years under Jobs. We can never know that, of course, but it's not unreasonable to assume that Jobs would have run into some of the same problems regarding market share and growth that have dogged Apple under Cook. 

And you can bet your iPhone that he would not have adopted some of the advice that Kane gives — for instance, that Apple "open up its operating system and license the technology." 
The next big thing What's troubling about Kane's book is that she barely pauses to look at Apple's financial success since Jobs's death. When she does consider the numbers, she strangely interprets Apple's growth under Cook as evidence of his failure. There's a suggestion that the numbers don't matter because Cook's domain is numbers:"Tim Cook was a master of spreadsheets, not innovation," she writes. He has hired lots of MBAs, so, of course, the business has performed well.

To really understand Apple's supposed collapse, Kane wants us to consider other, more subjective bits of evidence. 

During Apple's recent product launch events, its executives have taken shots at its competitors — evidence of the firm's "insecurity," she writes. Cook is justifiably faulted for the fact that Apple released buggy apps like Maps and Siri and then, oddly, for the fact that he fired Scott Forstall, the executive in charge of those features. Cook's high standards, Kane says, risks "stifling innovation." 

When Apple began selling the iPhone 5, the company billed the device as "The biggest thing to happen to iPhone since iPhone," a tagline that Kane describes as"uninspired" compared to the"bewitching" taglines that accompanied previous Apple launches. Some hits from Jobs's tenure include"The funnest iPod ever" and"If you don't have an iPhone, well, you don't have an iPhone." Bewitching, eh?

Kane's primary objection to Apple under Cook is that it hasn't given us the proverbial "next big thing." 

Since 2010, when it unveiled the iPad, Apple has only made incremental improvements to its devices, while competitors like Google have gone public with their plans for robots and self-driving cars and computerized eyeglasses. (Though they haven't begun selling these doodads.) This is a tired criticism, one that fundamentally misunderstands how Apple works. 

Apple has always created its next big things in secret. Unlike Google and Microsoft, it rarely publicizes its innovations before they're ready. The fact that we don't know what Apple will do next could be evidence that it has run out of ideas. But you could have said the same thing late in 2001, just before it launched the iPod, or in 2007 just before it launched the iPhone, or in 2010 just before it launched the iPad. 

Indeed, people did make such claims then, pointing each time to Apple's slip into just making incremental improvements, and insisting each time that it meant Apple was done for. History hasn't been kind to their predictions. Could those critics be correct now? Sure. The technology industry is brutal, and Apple, like any other company, could fail.

But the fact that Apple has gone four years without some category-defining new product isn't evidence that Apple has lost its way. Instead, it mainly proves that Apple under Cook is operating just like Apple under Jobs. That should be reassuring to anyone who cares about the future of the company
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Nokia-Microsoft deal delayed until April

Nokia-Microsoft deal delayed until April

Nokia-Microsoft deal delayed until April
Nokia does not expect to close the sale of its phone business to Microsoft until April as talks with Asian regulators drag on, it said.

HELSINKI: Nokia does not expect to close the sale of its phone business to Microsoft until April as talks with Asian regulators drag on, it said on Monday, fuelling speculation it may have to make more concessions to get the deal done. 

Analysts said the delay meant Nokia, which had expected to close the deal by the end of March, might have to make concessions over the licence fees it will charge on patents that will remain with the Finnish firm after the deal is closed. 

Earlier this month, media reports said Google and Samsung Electronics had asked Chinese regulators to ensure the 5.4 billion euro ($7.4 billion) deal between Microsoft and Nokia would not lead to higher licensing fees. 

"(The delay) is a bad sign. They have been discussing with authorities for quite a while already, and they still need more time," said Sami Sarkamies, an analyst at Nordea Markets. 

"The biggest risk is in the upside of their patents. It looks like Nokia will have to make bigger concessions to push the deal through." 

Nokia shares fell 1.2% to 5.22 euros in early Helsinki trade. 

Nokia has already received approvals for the deal from the European Commission and the US Department of Justice, but some antitrust authorities in Asia are still conducting their reviews, it said in a statement. 

The Finnish firm said both companies remained committed to the transaction, and Microsoft echoed it expected the deal to close next month. 

"We are nearing the final stages of our global regulatory approval process," Brad Smith, Microsoft's general counsel, said on the company's website. "Currently we are awaiting approval confirmation in the final markets." 

Nokia reiterated its tax disputes in India would not have an impact on the deal schedule. 

The company last week was hit with a new $414 million tax claim by Indian authorities, following a recent Supreme Court decision to order Nokia to give a $571 million guarantee before transferring its Chennai factory to Microsoft. 

The time needed to close the deal, announced last September, is not exceptional for Microsoft, which took five months to complete its purchase of online chat company Skype in 2011. 

Without its loss-making handset business, Nokia will in future derive more than 90% of its sales from telecom equipment unit Nokia Services and Networks, and will also hold a trove of technology patents as well as a navigation software unit. 

Nokia is expected to outline its new strategy after the closure of the Microsoft deal
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Buying online? Read the user agreement


Buying online? Read the user agreement

Buying online? Read the user agreement
There are many people who accept the user agreements on websites without reading them and give up many of their rights. 

When Mumbai resident Ritika Desai was browsing through an online portal that offered free filing of income tax, a 10-page 'terms & conditions and privacy policy agreement' popped up on screen. The print was too small and the sentences too long, so Desai clicked the 'I agree' button without much thought and went ahead with the tax filing. After a few days, she was flooded with calls from financial planning firms and banks offering investment products. 

"I thought it was a telemarketing gimmick, but when some callers mentioned my bank account details, I knew something was amiss," she says. On probing one caller, she found that the tax filing portal had released her information to them. When a livid Desai called up the portal, they told her that she had given them the right to share the information as per the terms & conditions. "Since I had clicked on the 'I agree' button, there was nothing I could do to stop them," she says. 

There are many like Desai, who accept the user agreements on websites without reading them and give up many of their rights. "People think these agreements are not significant enough to cause damage. Besides, they are so lengthy that it is boring to go through each and every point," says Ravi Goenka, advocate, Goenka Law Associates. So what should you do? 

Watch out for
Ideally, you should read every line in the user agreement. If you find it too tedious, here are some tips that will help you understand what you are agreeing to. The first rule is to read anything that is in all-caps or bold or highlighted. The fact that the text has been highlighted means it is important. Second, hunt for key clauses that will be most relevant to you by using CTRL + F and typing in the keywords (see Keywords to find...). This will take you instantly to the clause that matters. 

When you are availing of a service through a website, the most important thing is to understand your ownership rights, as well as that of the website. For instance, while using a website to share content like documents or photos, you need to be clear about the website's rights over these. Some user agreements are drafted to give the website hosting your work the right to reproduce it. Some social networking sites also reserve the right to use your photos for commercial purposes. Apart from ownership, you must also understand the right of the website to share your information with third parties. 

For instance, in Google's terms of services, there is an entire section dedicated to 'your content in our service', which explains the service provider's right to your content. It also has a section that covers misuse of service. If you use it in any way other than that mentioned in the service, you can be sued. 
If you are purchasing online products, you will need to look out for points that are different from that for a service. Watch out for disclaimers, which free the seller of liability in case the product you receive is damaged or substandard. Second, understand the website's payment policy—whether it is online, through cash, or on delivery. 

When it comes to monthly subscriptions, pay attention to the cancellation policy. Generally, websites have an option that allows you to unsubscribe, but it could come at a cost, say, without a refund or after deduction of a certain percentage of payment. If you are buying software, make sure the company does not slip in additional content like a program or adware that you do not want. Usually, when the firm does this, it protects itself by mentioning the content in the agreement. 

What can you do?
You cannot ask the company to change the clauses if you don't agree with them. However, if you accept the agreement and realise that the company has violated your rights, you can approach it. If it does not solve your problem, you can file a case of deficiency of service in a consumer court, but watch out for the arbitration clause. If there is such a clause, you cannot file a case in the court and will have to mandatorily settle the matter through arbitration, that is, via a panel set up to hear and settle the issue. Typically, the arbitrators are decided by both parties, but sometimes, the user agreement contains a clause that allows the company to appoint arbitrators. Again, there is little you can do if you feel the company is not being fair
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Leaked: Apple’s plan to turn iPhone into your personal doctor


Leaked: Apple’s plan to turn iPhone into your personal doctor




Leaked: Apple’s plan to turn iPhone into your personal doctor
As per leaked screenshots, Apple is aiming to significantly expand on how iPhones track and record user’s health and fitness data with Healthbook.
NEW DELHI: Smartphones can already track and record details of a user's physical activities but if Apple goes ahead with its plans, the next iPhone may come with a new app called Healthbook, which will help people manage almost all aspects of their general health.

According to screenshots leaked by 9To5Mac, a website that reports on Apple products, Apple is aiming to significantly expand on how smartphones track and record data on a user's health and fitness with Healthbook.

Currently, phones like iPhone 5S, Galaxy S4 and Nexus 5 have dedicated hardware that allows physical activity apps like Move and Runtastic Pedometer to track the movements of a user and generate reports, showing the number of steps a user took or number of calories consumed every day. But if the supposed screenshots of Healthbook are real, then Apple's iPhone will do lot more.

According to information cards part of the Healthbook app, Apple is aiming to give iPhone users ability to track physical activity, nutrition, blood sugar, sleep pattern, respiratory rate, heart rate, hydration level, oxygen saturation, weight and blood pressure.



While tracking physical activity seems simple enough - an accelerometer in the phone can sense the body movement - it is not clear how Apple will measure blood sugar or oxygen saturation for a user. Currently, the best way to measure these vital signs is through specialised health tools.

The rumours suggest that Healthbook will likely work with iWatch, a wearable gadget that Apple will reportedly launch this year. The iWatch may give Apple ability to collect more precise and accurate health data about a user. To track data related to oxygen saturation or blood sugar that requires special devices, Apple may use third-party tools that communicate with iPhone wirelessly.

Apple is not alone in turning smartphones into health tracking gadgets. With apps like Runtastic and Calorie Counter downloaded by millions, Samsung realized the health and fitness tracking potential of smartphones early. In 2013, when the company launched Galaxy S4, one of the features it highlighted was S Health, an in-built app that used the special hardware in the phone to track the physical activity of a user.

A few months later when Apple announced iPhone 5S, the company said the device had a small processor called M7, which was dedicated to tasks related to tracking the physical activity of a user. Apps can use M7 to better track a user without affecting the battery life significantly. Google's Nexus 5 too has an additional processor similar to M7 for facilitating easy tracking of a user's physical activity.

With Galaxy S5, Samsung is expanding on the health-related features. The new Galaxy phone comes with a heart-rate sensor. It also works with Galaxy Fit, a physical activity tracker that doubles up as a smartwatch, to collect and store health-related data about a user. Galaxy Fit too has a heart-rate monitor.

So far Apple has not announced any device like Galaxy Fit or even an app like S Health but the leak of Healthbook shows that health and fitness tracking is likely to be an important area for the company.

In the last one year, Apple has hired a number of fitness experts, including Jay Blahnik, who was a consultant to Nike, Roy JEM Raymann, a sleep expert, and Dr Michael O'Reilly, a health expert. The company's executives also reportedly met officials of the US Food and Drug Administration in December 2013 to discuss health and fitness related apps or products the company might be building.

For smartphone companies, health and fitness tracking is a logical next big feature in their devices. Tracking and quantifying health or physical activity is not easy. But with the ubiquity of smartphones, which are full of different kinds of sensors and can talk to gadgets like a smartwatch or a fitness band through NFC or Bluetooth Low Energy, smartphone companies believe they have a chance to give users an easy way to track their health.

Google, the company that maintains Android, too is interested in creating solutions that help a user track his or her physical activity. Recently, when it announced Android Wear, a version of Android for wearable devices, the company said that with this version of Android, users will be able to track their physical activity in a better way.

"Hit your exercise goals with reminders and fitness summaries from Android Wear. Your favorite fitness apps can give you real-time speed, distance and time information on your wrist for your run, cycle or walk," Sundar Pichai, head of Android and Chrome divisions within Google, wrote on the official blog.

Images courtesy: 9To5Mac


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LG L90 Dual, L70 Dual available online in India


LG L90 Dual, L70 Dual available online in India

LG L90 Dual, L70 Dual available online in India
LG has started selling two mid-range dual-sim Android smartphones, L70 and L90, part of its L Series III, in the Indian market. 
NEW DELHI: It appears that LG has started selling two mid-range dual-sim Android smartphones, L70 and L90, part of its L Series III, in the Indian market. 

Although the South Korean electronics giant has not made any official announcement, it has listed the L90 on its official India website, albeit without a price point. E-commerce website SnapDeal has already started selling the phones with LG L70 available at a selling price of Rs 14,500 (with Rs 16,990 mentioned as the MRP) and L90 bearing a price tag of Rs 17,499 (with Rs 19,990 quoted as the MRP). Both the phones are shipped in 12 business days which suggests that LG might make an official announcement in the coming days. 

LG L70 and L90 phones were unveiled at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona. The smartphones come with Android 4.4 KitKat, the latest version of the OS. These phones also include a feature called Knock Code, which lets users unlock the phone by tapping the phone in a specified manner. 

LG L70 sports a 4.5-inch display (400 X 800p) and is powered by a 1.2GHz dual-core Qualcomm Snapdragon 200 processor, Adreno 302 graphics processor and 1GB RAM. It comes with 4GB internal storage expandable via microSD card, and a 2,100mAh removable battery. The phone sports an 8MP rear camera and a VGA front facing camera. 

LG L90 sports a 4.7-inch display (540 X 960p) and is powered by a 1.2GHz quad-core Qualcomm Snapdragon 400 processor, Adreno 305 graphics processor and 1GB RAM. It comes with 8GB internal storage expandable up to 32GB via microSD card, and a 2,540mAh removable battery. The phone sports an 8MP rear camera and a 1.3MP front camera.


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World T20: Team India has plenty to smile about


World T20: Team India has plenty to smile about

World T20: Team India has plenty to smile about
Skipper MS Dhoni addressed the media after the team's seven-wicket win over West Indies on Sunday, he stressed how keeping things in perspective is the key in, both, victory and defeat. (AP Photo)

DHAKA: While Tuesday could turn out to be a distressing day for India skipper MS Dhoni and owners of IPL franchise Chennai Super Kings if the Supreme Court pronounces an adverse verdict in the IPL spot-fixing scandal, the performance of the Indian team in the ICC World T20 has given the captain enough reasons to smile.

After a couple of difficult months in South Africa and New Zealand, India have got back to winning ways. Convincing wins over tough opponents like Pakistan and West Indies mean they are on the right track for greater exploits in the tournament.

When a pleased-looking Dhoni addressed the media after the team's seven-wicket win over West Indies on Sunday, he stressed how keeping things in perspective is the key in, both, victory and defeat. "I smile even when we lose," he quipped. "Cricket is a big part of our lives; but it is not the only life we lead."

Before this event began, serious questions were raised over India's ability to stop rampaging batsmen on flat wickets here. The bowling, though, has been a revelation. The spinners, led by Amit Mishra, have proved to be a handful.

Dhoni, who has suffered many a sleepless night mulling over his bowlers' incompetence, should sleep better now. "I am really happy with the way they have performed. There is a bit of help for them, but you need to execute your plans well, especially in this format. You will have a couple of big hitters in the opposition and you have to carefully plan to get them out. I am happy that our spinners, along with part-timers and fast bowlers, have done really well."

Mishra, in particular has been impressive, winning the Man of the Match awards in both the games, and showing the willingness to flight the ball and look for wickets. The Haryana leggie credited the skipper for his show and said Dhoni's tips helped him bowl better.

So what did the skipper tell him?

"He was feeling a bit of nerves against Pakistan," said Dhoni. "I went up to him and told him, 'You are known to turn the ball, flight it and vary pace. Don't just try to bowl the straighter one. Try to bowl back of a length so that the batsmen can't hit.' I told him his biggest strength is deceiving batsmen in the air.

"Before the Pakistan game, I knew he was not bowling at his 100%. I knew that the man of the match award will ease him and his performance will get better. He bowled well against Gayle and used the odd variations. There will be days when, like others, he too may get hit, but it's important that he backs his strength."

India enjoyed a well-deserved day off on Monday but they do have a few issues to think about before the clash against hosts Bangladesh.

'Bit of pressure on Yuvraj'

The form of their biggest match-winner in T20 cricket, Yuvraj Singh, is a matter of concern. Dhoni agreed that Yuvraj wasn't in great form but talked about the 'X' factor Yuvraj brings to the table.

"He is one of the best players of T20, but he is not in good touch right now. It becomes tough when you are dropped from ODIs and you have to make a comeback in T20s. There's a bit of pressure on him."

Right now, though, the only ones that should feel the pressure are India's opponents
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