1 "TAKE NO AS A QUESTION "

Monday, 26 August 2013

Micromax’s biggest, most expensive phone launched

Micromax’s biggest, most expensive phone launched


Micromax’s biggest, most expensive phone launched
Micromax has launched its biggest-ever and most expensive smartphone in India, the Canvas Doodle 2.

NEW DELHI: Indigenous smartphone manufacturer Micromax has launched its biggest-ever and most expensive smartphone in India. The new phone, named Canvas Doodle 2, has a 5.7-inch screen; the upcoming SamsungGalaxy Note III is also said to have a 5.7-inch display.

Available on online retailer Snapdeal, the new Micromax phone has been priced at Rs 19,990, making it the most expensive handset by the company. The listing says the phone will be dispatched in five days.

The new Canvas Doodle 2 has previously been teased by Micromax via its Facebook page with the tagline "Can your imagination get bigger?" The phone is not listed on the company's website as of now.

Micromax Canvas Doodle 2 has screen resolution of 1280x720p, same as that of Canvas HD and Canvas 4. It is powered by a 1.2GHz quad-core processor, backed by 1GB RAM and comes with 12GB internal storage. This dual-sim smartphone will run on Android4.2 (Jelly Bean) and come with Micromax's 'Blow to Unlock' feature.

The manufacturer has used a 12MP camera with dual-LED flash on the back and a 5MP shooter in front. The listing on Snapdeal mentions connectivity options like 2G, 3G and Wi-Fi. The 2,600mAh battery of the phone has been rated at 8 hours of talk time on 2G network.

Micromax has said it will launch a total of 30 smartphones this year and has tasted success with handsets likes Canvas HD and Canvas 4
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Rupee down 70 paise against dollar in early trade


Rupee down 70 paise against dollar in early trade




MUMBAI: The rupee on Monday again turned weak and plunged 70 paise to 63.90 against theUS dollar in early trade after strong recovery on Friday, due to increased demand for the American currency from importers and some banks. 

Dealers said besides increased month-end demand for dollar from importers, dollar's gain against some currencies overseas put pressure on the domestic currency. 

However, a higher opening in the domestic equity market, capped the rupee's fall, they said.


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Thursday, 22 August 2013

Google to work with IBM, Continental on self-driving cars

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Google to work with IBM, Continental on self-driving cars


Google to work with IBM, Continental on self-driving cars: Report
German automotive parts maker Continental AG is close to agreeing alliances with Google and IBM to develop autonomous driving systems for cars.
FRANKFURT: German automotive parts makerContinental AG is close to agreeing alliances with Google and IBM to develop autonomous driving systems for cars, a German newspaper reported.

Daily Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung cited unspecified sources as saying Continental aims to unveil the two pacts at the Frankfurt Car Show in September.

Continental is already in an alliance with US network equipment maker Cisco Systems to work on systems for automated and driverless automobiles and on data transfer between cars.

A Continental spokesman declined to comment. Spokespeople for Google and IBM in Germany were not immediately available for comment.

Google has been working on self-driving technology since 2010, including testing a fleet of self-driving cars along California roadways.

A raft of automakers including GM, Ford, Toyota and Volkswagen are developing computer-controlled features that help drivers avoid accidents.







Google Chromecast review


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A new device from Google makes it easy to stream video from several popular services to a high-definition TV. Chromecast is tiny enough to dangle from a keychain when not in use, but it packs a big punch for a low price.
At merely $35, Chromecast is irresistible. Using your home Wi-Fi network, it streams some of your favorite shows from some of your favorite services, including Netflix and Google's YouTube. It takes only a few minutes to set up, and the device worked flawlessly.
Chromecast joins Roku, Apple TV and several other devices meant to project Internet content onto TVs. In the early days of online video, people were content watching movies and shows on their desktop or laptop computers. But as these services become more popular and even replace cable TV in some households, there's a greater desire to get them playing on television sets, which tend to be the largest screens in living rooms.
That's especially true when your computer is a phone or tablet and has a smaller screen.
Chromecast, which is about the size of a thumb drive, plugs directly into the HDMI port of an HDTV. A USB cable must be inserted at the other end of the Chromecast and connected to a power source, either a wall outlet or a USB port on the TV.

It was easy to sync Chromecast with my Android phone, and it was an even nicer experience with Google's new Nexus 7 tablet. There's something to be said for turning my touch-screen device into a remote control for Netflix.
I watched an episode of Netflix's original series "House of Cards" in high definition without a glitch. Same goes for watching the BBC's "Empire of the Sun," a free offering from Google's online Play store. But other titles there cost money, as does a Netflix subscription. Chromecast is merely a physical conduit to the services I'd already signed up and paid for.
Even though I already have a Netflix app on my smartphone, I had to download a Chromecast version of it, as well as the main Chromecast app from Google. That's a one-time affair, and it's a snap to get them up and running after the initial installation.
To watch a movie, I simply choose it from the Chromecast Netflix app. Once it's playing on the big screen, I was able to easily pause, play and forward through my content with a swipe of the finger. "House of Cards" continues to play even after I power off my phone completely, as the video passes through my Wi-Fi network, which remains on. I do have to turn my phone back on to regain remote control over the viewing experience.

It works similarly with Chromecast app for Google Play and YouTube.
More apps are coming. For Hulu Plus, HBO Go and other services without apps yet, it's possible to simply stream that content on Google's Chrome Web browser, assuming you have accounts with them. You can then have whatever is showing on the browser project onto the TV.
In practice, though, I was never able to successfully connect a desktop or a laptop computer, each running the latest version of the Chrome browser, to the Chromecast device. There are apps and browser extensions and not-fully supported operating systems that all need to be in sync to pull it off. In my tests, using two different Macs and a Windows computer, they never were.
Also, Chromecast doesn't allow so-called "sideloaded" content to be streamed on it. "Sideloaded" is essentially shorthand for content that Google can't be certain you have legally purchased and have the rights to consume. If I had gotten the Chrome browser method to work, I could have used that to view them on the big screen. But it's easier said than done.
Plenty of devices allow much easier local content streaming. Chromecast isn't one of them. It's not a deal-breaker for me, though.
I suspect many people already have devices that can stream these popular services to an HD display. If you have an Xbox 360 or a PlayStation 3, you're already good to go. The same goes for the Roku streaming box that handles some of the same streaming apps as Chromecast, and many more. Heck, even a laptop with an HDMI output can deliver the content to an HDTV.
Unlike many of the other streaming devices, you still need a phone, tablet or regular computer to control your viewing with Chromecast. Roku's streaming box, for instance, lets you sign into accounts, choose content and rewind video with an included remote. Roku does make a separate streaming stick, similar to Chromecast, but that works only with TVs that have a technology known as mobile high-definition links, or MHL.
For now, there are only a handful of apps currently available to use with Chromecast. But they are among the most popular Internet video services. Video from Apple's iTunes isn't likely to come to Chromecast any time soon, but you can expect many more to be added if the device takes off. (If you really need iTunes, you'll need an Apple TV. Roku doesn't have it, either.)
At $35, Chromecast is cheaper than other streaming devices, which run about $100 each. I can think of a lot of worse ways to fork over $35.
If you don't already have a device that can stream Netflix to your HDTV, Chromecast hits the sweet spot.


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Facebook puts public updates on display


Facebook puts public updates on display

With the widespread release of embedded posts, the social network is positioning itself as a digital water cooler where netizens discuss what's happening right now.


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The Facebook icon flag at the social network's Menlo Park, Calif., campus.
Facebook sharing will extend far beyond the walls of the social network as the company has released its embedded posts feature to all members Wednesday.
Embedded posts are part of Facebook's play to link its network of 1.15 billion people to current affairs and breaking news. The feature, first released to a select group of media organizations last month, now lets anyone embed public Facebook updates, like the one below from CEO Mark Zuckerberg, on their own Web sites.
With the widespread release, Facebook has made some improvements to embedded posts so that videos can play inside embeds. The embeds are also now better suited for mobile environments, the company said.
Embedded posts work to supplement hashtags, added in June, and make the social network instantly more accessible to journalists, bloggers, and casual observers.
Facebook's desire to spread its content far and wide is meant to ensure that it is not excluded from conversations unfolding around pop culture, TV shows, celebrities, memes, or even tragic events, areas where Twitter, which has long been regarded as the world's digital water cooler, often has the real-time advantage. The social network's Twitter-like features also seem intended to make its apps more appealing to advertisers looking to link campaigns to trending events.

Indian telecom subscriber crosses 90 crore: TRAI

Indian telecom subscriber crosses 90 crore: TRAI


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Registering a marginal growth, Indian telecom subscriber base crossed 90 crore-mark in May this year after almost two years.
The base grew by 0.34 percent to reach 90.005 crore, according to TRAI data.
This is the second time the subscriber base is breaching the 90 crore-mark. Earlier in June 2012, it had touched 96.55 crore. Since then the base has been shrinking steadily. The first time it crossed the 90 crore-mark was in September 2011.
"The number of telephone subscribers in India increased to 900.05 million at the end of May, 2013 from 897.02 million at the end of April 2013, thereby showing a monthly growth rate of 0.34 percent," TRAI said in a report Friday.
Mobile or wireless subscriber base increased from 86.7 crore in April 2013 to 87 crore at the end of May 2013, registering a monthly growth of 0.37 percent.
Reliance Communications led the growth in mobile business by adding over 12 lakh new customers, followed by Vodafone with over 9 lakh new customers, Idea Cellular 8.67 lakh, Airtel 8.51 lakh, Aircel 2.77 lakh new customers.
New operator Videocon saw maximum growth in percentage terms during the month. The mobile subscriber base of Videocon grew by 6.79 percent to 22.85 lakhs in May from 21.39 in previous month.
State-run BSNL and MTNL lost 9 lakh and 97,583 customers respectively in May taking their total customer base to 9.80 crore and 48 lakhs respectively.
Bharti Airtel maintained its lead in overall market share with total subscriber base of over 18.96 crore. Airtel leadership was followed by Vodafone with over 15.46 crore customers. RCom and Idea Cellular's total customer base stood very close to each other at 12.48 crore and 12.37 crore respectively.

Google's experiments in Web access: Fiber, Wi-Fi in parks and balloons

Google's experiments in Web access: Fiber, Wi-Fi in parks and balloons


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From sending solar-powered balloons into the stratosphere to offering free Wi-Fi in parks, Google is quietly spending hundreds of millions of dollars on nascent Internet services that may one day challenge the telecom and cable companies.
In recent months, Google Inc has announced plans to bring free wireless Internet access to 7,000 Starbucks cafes across America, eventually displacing AT&T Inc; it has asked U.S. regulators for broader access to wireless airwaves; and it has launched 30 solar-powered balloons over the South Pacific ocean, designed to beam the Internet to remote regions.
Then there is Google Fiber, the high-speed cable TV and Internet service that was introduced inKansas City late last year and that will be expanded soon to Austin and Provo, Utah. Fiber delivers Internet speeds at 1 gigabit per second, as much as 100 times faster than the average U.S. network.
Google is happy with customer responses in Kansas so far and may roll Google Fiber out to a few more U.S. cities, according to several people close to the project.
"Fiber is considered the golden child right now within Google because of its disruptive nature and the applause that they get from the communities using it," said a former member of Google Access, a group headed by Vice President Milo Medin, who drives the company's Internet access projects.
Medin, a networking industry veteran who founded the seminal @Home cable broadband network in the 1990s, leads a few hundred employees. The group operates autonomously with its own engineering, finance and marketing units, according to the source.
As Google delivers more music, videos and other content to mobile devices, it has become increasingly invested in ensuring it gets the bandwidth it needs. Web access projects like Fiber could help Google grow revenues beyond its maturing search business, and give it more insight into consumers' online habits, crucial to making ads more effective.
But Google would be venturing into territory far afield from its traditional strengths and margins may suffer as a result, analysts said. The company would also be competing against well-established Internet service providers, such as AT&T or Time Warner Cable Inc.
Content providers have clashed with distributors in the past. For instance, Netflix Inc, which streams billions of hours of video every month, has accused cable company Comcast Corp of giving its own content preferential treatment.
The future of U.S. federal regulations that forbid Internet service providers from blocking or slowing another company's online offerings are currently up in the air, with Verizon Communications Inc challenging the rules in court.
"Users want more speed. They don't want artificial ceilings imposed on what's possible on the Web," said Kevin Lo, general manager of Google Access.
Lo said Google was pleased with the customer response to Fiber in Kansas City so far, but he declined to give details such as subscriber numbers, financial goals, or expansion plans.
Tearing up the streets
Building high-speed networks is a cumbersome process that requires tearing up streets and working with local governments to get access to utility poles and approvals.
Given Fiber's small footprint and the limited amount of online services that actually need such high bandwidth today, the immediate threat to cable and telecom companies may be limited, according to some industry observers.
Time Warner Cable President Rob Marcus said in April he believed Google Fiber "passed" only 4,000 homes in Kansas City at the time. "The number of defections we've seen is de minimis at this point," Marcus said.
AT&T Inc said in April that it was ready to build its own 1 gigabit per second fiber network in Austin, provided it receives the same treatment from local authorities as Google, which plans to begin connecting homes there in mid-2014.
"I have to think that the existing players are trying to figure out how to respond to this, because if it goes bigger it will definitely give them a new kind of competition," said Bill Coughran, a partner at venture capital firm Sequoia Capital. He was previously senior vice president of engineering at Google and had worked on the Fiber project.
To make a difference to Google's overall business, which is expected to generate roughly $60 billion in revenue this year, the Fiber service needs to achieve significant scale.
In a city of 1 million households for example, Google would reap a modest $288 million a year in subscription revenue if 20 percent of families were to sign up for its $120 monthly TV and Internet service. If Google were able to enlist half the homes in the city, that could mean $720 million in annual revenue.
Bernstein analyst Carlos Kirjner estimated the cost of making Fiber available to 300,000 homes in the greater Kansas City region at $170 million. Expanding Fiber to 20 million U.S. homes, which Kirjner believes is not likely, would cost $10 billion to $15 billion, he wrote in a research report.
Diving into the access business in a bigger way could in the short term hurt Google's operating margin, which stands in the mid-40-percent range for its core Internet business. Typical cable industry margins are in the mid-30 percent range.
Michael Binger, a portfolio manager at Gradient Investments which owns Google shares, said he is comfortable with the company's current level of investment in projects like Fiber.
But if Google were to radically ramp up such efforts, for example by investing in a costly nationwide high-speed network, he said, "I'd want more detail about what their vision is, and how it provides a financial return down the road."
Air balloons
With $54 billion in cash, Google can afford to fund experiments such as Fiber and Loon - the air balloon project run by Google X, the secretive arm of the company that specializes in bold, futuristic projects such as robot cars.
Loon involves creating an airborne wireless network using 12-meter-tall, super-pressured air balloons powered by the sun. They would drift along relatively slower air currents in the stratosphere and run off batteries at night.

In June, Google launched a test of 30 balloons over New Zealand equipped to deliver 3G-like wireless speeds to ground antennas that in turn transmit the signal to wireless devices. The goal is to eventually keep a large fleet of balloons in the skies, though analysts say Google will face many technical and regulatory challenges operating such a network.
Some investors consider these projects a waste of resources.
"There are people on Wall Street who would like Google to quit spending on things that may not actually materialize in generating significant revenue," said Needham & Co's Kerry Rice.
But he added that a Google-owned, high-speed Internet service would support its other online businesses such as YouTube, which can offer more long-form video programming that allow for more opportunities to insert commercials.
"If you have the infrastructure in place, there are a lot of things you can do," Rice said.
YouTube said in May it was streaming 6 billion hours of video a month. The goal is to get to 1 billion hours a day within a couple years, according to a person familiar with the matter, adding that bandwidth is crucial to the effort to ramp up viewership. Google declined to comment.
Wall Street has generally tolerated Google's experiments because of past successes such as the Android software, which is now installed on four-fifths of the world's smartphones. Other products such as Google TV, however, have fared less well.

Owning the pipes would give Google even more insight into consumers' online habits, which can help make its ads and products more effective, analysts said.
"If you're the network provider and you're monitoring the traffic, looking at what people are doing, you're going to be the first to know," said Ian Keene, a Gartner analyst.
Google has funded public WiFi networks managed by cities such as New York and San Francisco. In the Starbucks deal, Google will create and run a wireless service it says will be ten times faster than the previous WiFi Starbucks offered.
Starbucks' existing wireless provider, AT&T, said when the deal was announced that it had offered to upgrade its WiFi service and that it continues to provide Starbucks with a variety of services. It could not be immediately be reached for additional comment on Wednesday.
As part of the deal, Google will also help develop a new version of the Starbucks Digital Network available to customers, putting Google in a strong position to promote the music and other media it sells and to offer more targeted advertising.
"They're not underwriting these efforts for the benefit of the Internet community," said Forrester Research analyst Charles Golvin. "They look at the big picture that these efforts are going to generate."

Snubbed by Facebook, hacker who exposed bug to get reward from unexpected source

Snubbed by Facebook, hacker who exposed bug to get reward from unexpected source


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A man who hacked Mark Zuckerberg's Facebook page to expose a software bug is getting donations from hackers around the world after the company declined to pay him under a program that normally rewards people who report flaws.
Khalil Shreateh discovered and reported the flaw but was initially dismissed by the company's security team. He then posted a message on the billionaire's wall to prove the bug's existence.
Now, Marc Maiffret, chief technology officer of cyber-security firm BeyondTrust, is trying to mobilize fellow hackers to raise a $10,000 reward for Shreateh after Facebook refused to compensate him.
Maiffret, a high school dropout and self-taught hacker, said on Tuesday he has raised about $9,000 so far, including the $2,000 he initially contributed.
He and other hackers say Facebook unfairly denied Shreateh, a Palestinian, a payment under its "Bug Bounty" program. It doles out at least $500 to individuals who bring software bugs to the company's attention.

"He is sitting there in Palestine doing this research on a five-year-old laptop that looks like it is half broken," Maiffret said. "It's something that might help him out in a big way."
Shreateh uncovered the flaw on the company's website that allows members to post messages on the wall of any other user, including Zuckerberg's. He tried to submit the bug for review but the website's security team did not accept his report.
He then posted a message to Zuckerberg himself on the chief executive officer's private account, saying he was having trouble getting his team's attention.
"Sorry for breaking your privacy," Shreateh said in the post.
The bug was quickly fixed and Facebook issued an apology on Monday for having been "too hasty and dismissive" with Shreateh's report. But it has not paid him a bounty.
"We will not change our practice of refusing to pay rewards to researchers who have tested vulnerabilities against real users," Chief Security Officer Joe Sullivan said in a blogpost.
He said Facebook has paid out more than $1 million under that program to researchers who followed its rules.

Corporates cutting jobs to save costs

Corporates cutting jobs to save costs

Corporates cutting jobs to save costs: Study
Faced with a tough economic scenario, corporates are cutting jobs and rationalising manpower to save on costs and the situation is likely to get worse in coming days, according to an Assocham study.

“Alongwith the increasing number of corporates rushing to banks for debt restructuring, scores of them are also being forced to go in for manpower rationalising, reducing the headcount to save costs which they are unable to bear in the face of a difficult economic environment,” according to the Assocham report on on Impact of Slowdown on Employment.
The sad part is the situation is likely to become worse, rather than improve, in the weeks to come and the pain would only increase, it said.
The companies resorting to rationalisation of manpower belong to sectors like infrastructure, gems and jewellery, educational solutions, realty, non-banking finance companies, especially in the gold-loan segment, media and public relations.
“More and more companies are approaching the consulting firms seeking solutions to cut costs so that they can weather the difficult economic environment vitiated by adverse global situation, pressure on currency, sinking stock market, high interest rates, inflation and limited elbow available with the government to bail out the troubled industry,” it said.
The report further pointed out that if the situation does not improve in the near future, the negative fallout would be felt on those sectors as well which are driven by job markets like consumer goods, white goods, electronic gadgets and passenger cars.
Moreover, eroding consumer confidence would also affect tourism and its constituents like hotels, restaurants and tour operating. The aviation sector would also face tougher times, the report suggests.
However, the sectors which are still doing well include agri-related companies in implements, tractors, fertiliser, seeds, extension services and the rural product focussed FMCG.
Current Account Deficit, which indicates imports of goods services and transfer are higher than their exports, touched 4.8 per cent (or USD 88.2 billion) of country’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) in 2012-13 period.
Meanwhile, after heavy battering, the rupee, stocks and bonds today showed some signs of a fightback with RBI intervening in the market with massive selling of dollars as the domestic currency breached the 64-mark today.
Also for the first time ever, the rupee slipped below the 100-mark against the British pound today.

Mythology does shape management of organisations’

‘Mythology does shape management of organisations’


Interview of the Day: ‘Mythology does shape management of organisations’
Dr. Devdutt Pattanaik, Chief Belief Officer, Future Group 
How mythology can shape the management in organisations?
Mythology does shape the management of organisations. Currently, the management lessons taught in B-schools are based on Biblical mythology (hence target and task orientation are on lines with ‘Promised Land and Commandments’) and the celebration of Business Leaders are ‘heroes’ in line with Greek mythology where meaning is granted by achievement. The veneer is rational but the soul remains mythical. It does not take the Indian mythology into consideration which focuses on subjectivity and consequences of actions.
How will you describe your role as the ‘Chief Belief Officer’ at the Future Group?
My role as the ‘Chief Belief Officer’ is to get people to break the frontiers of their thoughts and become aware of other beliefs and better appreciate their own.
What are your derivates from epics such as Ramayana and Mahabharata which can be applied to modern-day businesses, especially with respect to HR?
Ramayan and Mahabharat are not parables – they have no lessons. They are not prescriptions, they are reflections. We can derive frameworks from them that facilitate our decision-making process and make us more aware of the consequences of our actions. They reveal the extent to which people can go in order to validate themselves in an organisation. It explains how that can be the root cause of conflict and instability in organisations.
Do you think Gen-Y is ready to connect belief to business? How do you make them relate to this?
Gen-Y already has beliefs of its own. Are they aware of it? Is it good enough to take them to a happy zone? We confuse mythology with religion or something supernatural. Mythology is a study of human assumptions that shapes our actions and society at large. Our assumption today is that technology will solve all of life’s problems. This assumption is neither right nor wrong; but it has consequences. Our assumption today is that wealth generation brings happiness. This assumption is also neither right nor wrong; but it also has consequences. Our assumption is we can predict consequences of our actions. Even this assumption is neither right nor wrong; but it has consequences.
How does your approach improve the quality of talent in your organisation? And, how does it affect leadership?
Do you believe understanding assumptions of leaders/consumers/investors/employees is important to business? If yes, then, understanding of beliefs/myths is critical. If not, then it is not important. I do not believe in evangelising the value of mythology; the demand comes because people realise its value, not because like in the American model (that is embedded in your question), we sell its value.
According to you, what would be the long-term effect of this approach? 
No one can predict consequences of any action. But yes, it has the possibility of expanding our mind, making us wiser, which will benefit both society and industry.

Tips to get flatter stomach revealed

Tips to get flatter stomach revealed


Tips to get flatter stomach revealed
Tips to get flatter stomach revealed 

Getting rid of belly fat is simpler than you might have thought.


With the right plan, it's actually easier to lose that stubborn lower-body fat or the seemingly impossible to tone back-of-the-arm flab.

Stick to a healthy diet and exercise guidelines, and you'll be slimmer and healthier by summer.

Obviously, you want to keep your calories in a healthy range and avoid meals that are high in saturated fat.

But research has also shown that eating more of certain foods can help you burn excess visceral fat and pave the way to a smaller middle, theHuffington Post reported.

In addition to helping maintain heart health and keep inflammation levels under control, monounsaturated fatty acids, or MUFAs, may stop belly fat before it starts.

Research in the journal Diabetes Care found that people who got roughly 25 percent of their total daily calories from MUFAs gained no visceral fat over the course of the study, while those who ate less MUFAs and more carbs added fat to their midsections.

MUFA-rich food is olive oil, as you can use it in so many meals, but avocados and nuts are other excellent sources.

Pine nuts are particularly great because they also contain high levels of polyunsaturated fatty acids.

These acids increase levels of two hormones that signal your brain when you're full.

Try snacking on one ounce of pine nuts (about the amount you can fit in a shot glass) 20 minutes before mealtime to avoid overeating.

People with chronically high levels of the stress hormone cortisol tend to carry excess visceral fat.

Foods that are high on the glycemic index (GI), which uses a ranking system of 0 to 100, cause more rapid spikes in your blood sugar, in turn triggering the release of cortisol when glucose levels crash.

The constant up and down of your blood sugar levels can also lead to insulin resistance -- the first step on the road to type 2 diabetes. To help keep cortisol levels stable, choose low-GI foods (with a rating of 55 or less) like beans, lentils, and chickpeas, instead of high-GI options like white rice and potatoes.

A 2012 study in the Journal of Functional Foods found that people who drank one and a half cups of green tea enriched with a total of 609 milligrams of catechins (a group of antioxidants that have been shown to help burn fat cells) every day for 12 weeks lost almost 16 times as much visceral fat as those who consumed green tea without the added antioxidants.

To achieve similar results with store-bought green tea, you'll need to brew two to four cups daily (many varieties can contain 160 to 470 milligrams of catechins per cup).

When your body is low on calcium, dairy products produces a hormone that signals the body to store visceral fat.

Meeting your recommended daily calcium needs (that's 1,000 milligrams for adults) can help reduce levels of this hormone.

And a recent study published in Obesity Research found that calcium from dairy has a stronger effect than calcium from other sources.

It is recommended you eat low-fat Greek yogurt as a daily snack (just six ounces contain about 20 percent of your recommended dietary allowance for calcium), though any low-fat dairy will do
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IT co IPsoft to replace humans with machines

IT co IPsoft to replace humans with machines


IT co IPsoft to replace humans with machines
IPsoft, which relies on artificial intelligence to manage computer networks, is ready to disrupt the business process outsourcing (BPO) industry.

BANGALORE: IPsoft, which relies on artificial intelligence to manage computer networks, is ready to disrupt the business process outsourcing (BPO) industry by using what it calls "cognitive technology" that enables machines to do the work of humans, the India-born founder of the New York-based company said.

"By Christmas you will see it in action in one of the largest media companies," founder and chief executive officer Chetan Dube told ET in an exclusive interview. IPsoft's cognitive technology assimilates information just like the human brain and processes it with reliability of computers to solve problems, he said. A global investment bank and a large media company will be among the first users of the cutting-edge technology, Dube said, but declined to identify the customers.

Going beyond call centres
Earlier this year, Infosys tied up with IPsoft to use the latter's technology to provide IT infrastructure management solutions to its global customers. Its autonomic artificial intelligence engine picks trends by analysing hundreds of pieces of information all at once to diagnose and solve problems on computer networks with minimal human intervention.

IPsoft expects cognitive technology-based solutions, which it is introducing soon, to go well beyond basic call centre jobs to include other services such as disease diagnosis or even medicine prescription, typically the domain of trained practitioners with specialised knowledge.

"If you think autonomics has changed the world, wait till you see cognitive technologies," Dube, 44, said. "It is not going to be just great; it is going to be a phenomenon." IPsoft was founded in 1998 by Dube, a former associate professor of mathematics at New York University. The company tops $700 million (Rs 4,500 crore) in sales, and counts Morgan Stanley and BT among its clients.

Its India head-office is in Bangalore, where it employs 800 staff and is in the process of opening a second campus. Dube, a computer science graduate from IIT-Delhi, has been arguing that the era of outsourcing simple manual tasks to low-wage countries is nearing an end and will be replaced by intelligent, selflearning machines doing the same job at a fraction of the cost.

IPsoft, he said, is at the forefront of such a "creative destruction" that will transform the "bloated"IT industry. Nearly two-thirds of all problems on computer networks are being solved by IPsoft with no human intervention at all, Dube said, resulting in cost savings of at least 30%. In the aftermath of the 2008 global financial crisis, corporations in the US and Europe have been looking for ways to reduce costs and such technologies have been driving greater outsourcing in infrastructure management business, making it one of the fastest-growing services lines for the industry.

Dube said the company does not require capital for its current needs, but it is considering the possibility of going public. Ernst & Young is advising it on a potential IPO that, if it happens, will take place within 24 months. The intent of going public would be to help the company expand and invest more in research to be able to bring about more innovative technologies, the CEO said. "Now we don't have to report quarter by quarter; we can chase the 15-year dream.
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Thursday, 8 August 2013

Mozilla Firefox 23 brings social sharing button, mixed content blocker and network monitor

Mozilla Firefox 23 brings social sharing button, mixed content blocker and network monitor


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Mozilla has rolled out Firefox 23, the new iteration of its web browser for Windows, Mac, and Linux.

The new version of the browser is now available through the Firefox.com website. Existing desktop users will also be able to get the update through the browser.

The browser now sports a new logo and features a share button that lets users share a web page through a browser based dialog box, without the need to go to another web page. The sharing feature is enabled for Facebook. This is similar to Safari's sharing features, though it supports multiple services. The Firefox feature is based on Mozilla's Social API that makes it easier for web browsers to integrate with social media services. 

firefox23-social.jpgThe update also brings a Mixed Content Blocker. According to Mozilla, when secure HTTPS pages load additional content insecurely over HTTP (also known as Mixed Content), users are vulnerable to man-in-the-middle and eavesdropping attacks. The Mixed Content Blocker blocks insecure active content by default, protecting users from these attacks. Firefox automatically blocks mixed content and displays a shield icon in the address bar.

Firefox 23 also ships with a Network Monitor tool that allows users to track how long it takes for individual components of a webpage to load.

Change Log for Firefox 22 for Windows, Mac and Linux:
- NEW: Mixed content blocking enabled to protects users from man-in-the-middle attacks and eavesdroppers on HTTPS pages 
- NEW: Options panel created for Web Developer Toolbox
- CHANGED: "Enable JavaScript" preference checkbox has been removed and user-set values will be reset to the default
- CHANGED: Updated Firefox Logo
- CHANGED: Improved about:memory's functional UI
- CHANGED: Simplified interface for notifications of plugin installation
- CHANGED: Enabled DXVA2 on Windows Vista+ to accelerate H.264 video decoding
- CHANGED: Users can now switch to a new search provider across the entire browser
- CHANGED: CSP policies using the standard syntax and semantics will now be enforced
- CHANGED: <input type='file'> rendering improvements 
- CHANGED: Replace fixed-ratio audio resampler in webrtc.org capture code with Speex resampler and eliminate pseudo-44000Hz rate
- CHANGED: "Load images automatically" and Always show the tab bar" checkboxes removed from preferences and reset to defaults
- DEVELOPER: HTML5 <input type="range"> form control implemented
- DEVELOPER: Write more accessible pages on touch interfaces with new ARIA role for key buttons
- DEVELOPER: Social share functionality
- DEVELOPER: Added unprefixed requestAnimationFrame
- DEVELOPER: Implemented a global browser console
- DEVELOPER: Dropped blink effect from text-decoration: blink; and completely removed <blink> element
- DEVELOPER: New feature in toolbox: Network Monitor
- FIXED: Various security fixes

Yahoo to unveil a new logo in September

Yahoo to unveil a new logo in September


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Internet major Yahoo has announced that it will introduce a new logo next month as part of the company's renewed sense of purpose and progress.

Talking about the change on a Tumblr blog post, Kathy Savitt, Yahoo's Chief Marketing Officer said that "the new logo will be a modern redesign that's more reflective of the company's re-imagined design and new experiences."

To kickstart the process, the company has started a new '30 days of change' campaign. Starting Wednesday, Yahoo will display a variation of its logo on its homepage and across its network of websites in the US till the next month. It will publish the logo on its Tumblr, Twitter and Facebook pages, as well.

"The new logo will be a modern redesign that's more reflective of our re-imagined design and new experiences. To get everyone warmed up, we are kicking off 30 days of change. Beginning now, we will display a variation of the logo on our homepage and throughout our network in the U.S. for the next month. It's our way of having some fun while honouring the legacy of our present logo," said Savitt.

The company clarified that the new logo will retain the present logo's iconic exclamation mark and purple colour

"We also want to preserve the character that is unique to Yahoo! -- fun, vibrant, and welcoming -- so we'll be keeping the colour purple, our iconic exclamation point and of course the famous yodel. After all, some things never go out of style," Savitt added.

Yahoo's official new logo will be unveiled on September 4th at 9pm Pacific Time (US).

After Marissa Mayer's taking over as CEO in July 2012, Yahoo has been trying to transform itself into a modern Internet and mobile company. It has been on a buying spree acquiring biggies like Tumblrand has launched revamped versions of its mobile apps and its online image sharing service, Flickr.
 

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