1 "TAKE NO AS A QUESTION "

Sunday, 5 May 2013

15 healthy reasons to eat mangoes


15 healthy reasons to eat mangoes



15 healthy reasons to eat mangoes
15 healthy reasons to eat mangoes

Mango is called the king of fruits not just for its taste and super flashy yellow colour, but also for the array of health benefits it offers.

We give you 15 healthy reasons why you should stock up on mangoes this summer.

Fights cancer
Antioxidants like quercetin, isoquercitrin, astragalin, fisetin, gallic acid and methylgallat present in mango protect the body against colon, breast, leukemia and prostate cancers.

Keeps cholesterol in check
Mango has high level of vitamin C, pectin and fibres that help to lower serum cholesterol levels.

Skin cleanser
Mangoes help you unclog your pores and add freshness to the face. Mangoes are applicable to any skin type.

Alkalises the body
According to natural health school.com, mango is rich in tartaric acid, malic acid and traces of citric acid that primarily help in maintaining the alkali reserve of the body.

Weight loss
Mango has a lot of vitamins and nutrients that help the body feel fuller. Also, the fibrous fruit boosts the digestive function of the body by burning additional calories, helping in weight loss.

Regulates diabetes
Not only the fruit but the leaves of mangoes are healthy too. For people suffering from diabetes, just boil 5-6 mango leaves in a vessel, soak it through night and drink the filtered decoction in the morning. This is helps in regulating your insulin levels.

Mango has a low glycemic index (41-60) so going a little overboard will not increase your sugar levels.

Aphrodisiac
Mango has aphrodisiac qualities and is also called the 'love fruit'. Mangoes increase the virility in men.

Eye care
Did you know that mango is rich in vitamin A. One cup of sliced mangoes equals 25% intake of your daily need of vitamin A. Mangoes help in promoting good eye sight, fights dry eyes and also prevent night blindness.

Helps in digestion
Mango contains enzymes that help in breaking down protein. The fibrous nature of mango helps in digestion and elimination.

Heat stroke
When the sun is bogging you down this summer, just chop of a mango in a juicer; add a little water and a tbsp of sugar free or honey. This juice will instantly cool you down and prevent heat stroke.

Strengthens your immune
The deadly combination of vitamin C, vitamin A and 25 different kinds of carotenoids keep your immune system healthy.

Nutrition chart
According to care2.com, one cup (225 gms contain) contains the following percentages that apply to daily value.
105 calories
76 percent vitamin C (antioxidant and immune booster)
25 percent vitamin A (antioxidant and vision)
11 percent vitamin B6 plus other B vitamins (hormone production in brain and heart disease prevention)
9 percent healthy probiotic fibre
9 percent copper (copper is a co-factor for many vital enzymes plus production of red blood cells)
7 percent potassium (to balance out our high sodium intake)
4 percent magnesium

Body scrub
Make a paste of mashed mango, honey and milk and use as a body scrub, you will feel that your skin is tender and smooth.

Aids concentration and memory
Feed mangoes to children who find it difficult to concentrate on studies. The glutamine acid found in mangoes help in keeping cells alive and boosting memory.

High iron for women
Mango is rich in iron, hence it is a great natural solution for people suffering from anemia. Menopausal women can indulge in mangoes as this will increase their iron levels and calcium at the same time.

Next version of Aakash tablet to cost Rs 2,500: Datawind


Next version of Aakash tablet to cost Rs 2,500: Datawind



Next version of Aakash tablet to cost Rs 2,500: Datawind
Datawind said it is ready to provide the next version of the device at a tentative price of Rs 2,500 apiece.
NEW DELHI: After completing supply of 1 lakh units of Aakash tablets to IIT Bombay for Rs 2,263 apiece, Datawind said it is ready to provide the next version of the device at a tentative price of Rs 2,500 apiece.

"As per my information, the committee on Aakash tablets is looking to higher version of the device at Rs 2,500 a piece and we are ready to match the price on order for every 10 lakh units," Datawind CEO Suneet Singh Tuli told reporters here.

When queried about alleged delays in supply of Aakash tablets under the previous tender, he said Datawind has supplied all tablets more than a month in advance.

"The deadline to finish supplies of Aakash tablet is around June 6 under the tender clause. We have done it by May 1 so we have complied with the norms," he said.

Datawind has recommended higher specifications for the next version of Aakash tablets which will include a SIM slot and enable users to make calls.

Tuli welcomed the Preferential Market Access policy norms which in general has been opposed by foreign companies. The policy mandates government to procure electronic products, including tablet PCs, which should have at least 30 per cent components made locally.

"We have set up an LCD touchscreen unit in Amritsar. Therefore, Datawind will comply to the norms of 30 per cent value addition in the product from India. I would like government to strictly implement it. It is good for the country and will encourage electronics manufacturing in the country," Tuli said.

He said that other companies will have to set up LCD units in India to meet PMA conditions.

Hotmail is dead as Outlook.com takes over


Hotmail is dead as Outlook.com takes over



Hotmail is dead as Outlook.com takes over
Microsoft's Hotmail was phased out on Friday, as the US tech giant completed a rebranding to Outlook.com.

SAN FRANCISCO: Microsoft's Hotmail, the free webmail service used by hundreds of millions of people around the world, was phased out on Friday, as the US tech giant completed a rebranding to Outlook.com.

"We're excited to announce that we've completed upgrading all Hotmail customers to Outlook.com," Microsoft's Dick Craddock said in a blog post late Thursday.

"Coupled with the growing organic excitement for Outlook.com, this has pushed us to over 400 million active Outlook.com accounts."

The transition began in February, when Microsoft began a test of moving users to the new Outlook.com services.

"Hotmail was still one of the most widely used services, with over 300 million active accounts," Craddock said.

"This made the magnitude of the process incredible, maybe even unprecedented. This meant communicating with hundreds of millions of people, upgrading all their mailboxes -- equaling more than 150 million gigabytes of data -- and making sure that every person's mail, calendar, contacts, folders and personal preferences were preserved in the upgrade."

Outlook.com addresses will be better synched to other Microsoft services, such as its Bing search engine and Skydrive, the cloud storage system.

Meet smartphone, your new doctor


Meet smartphone, your new doctor



Meet smartphone, your new doctor
By hooking a variety of gadgets onto a smartphone you could almost get a complete physical check-up.

WASHINGTON: It's not a Star Trek tricorder, but by hooking a variety of gadgets onto a smartphone you could almost get a complete physical check-up -- without the paper gown or even a visit to the doctor's office.

Blood pressure? Just plug the arm cuff into the phone for a quick reading.

Heart okay? Put your fingers in the right spot, and the squiggly rhythm of an EKG appears on the phone's screen.

Plug in a few more devices and you could have photos of your eardrum (Look, no infection!) and the back of your eye, listen to your heartbeat, chart your lung function, even get a sonogram.

If this sounds like a little too much DIY medical care, well, the idea isn't to self-diagnose with Dr iPhone. But companies are rapidly developing miniature medical devices that tap the power of the ubiquitous smartphone in hopes of changing how people monitor their own health.

"We wanted to make sure they have all the right tools available in their pocket" is how Joseph Flaherty of AgaMatrix describes his company's tiny glucose monitor. Diabetics can plug the iBGStar into the bottom of an iPhone and check blood sugar on the go without carrying an extra device.

This mobile medicine also might help doctors care for patients in new ways. In March, prominent San Diego cardiologist Eric Topol tweeted "no emergency landing req'd" when he used his smartphone EKG to diagnose a distressing but not immediately dangerous irregular heartbeat in a fellow airplane passenger at 30,000 feet.

And the University of California, San Francisco, hopes to enroll a staggering 1 million people in its Health eHeart Study to see whether using mobile technology, including smartphone tracking of people's heart rate and blood pressure, could help treat and prevent cardiovascular disease.

The question: Do smartphone devices really work well enough for the average patient and primary care doctor to dive in, or are early adopters just going for the cool factor? Many of the tools cost $100 to $200, there's little public sales information yet, and it's not clear how insurers will handle the fledgling trend.

"Technology sometimes evolves faster than we're ready for it," cautioned Dr Glen Stream of the American Academy of Family Physicians. "We're recognising more and more that not all care needs to be delivered face to face," but only if people measure the right things and have a relationship with a doctor to help make good use of the findings, he stressed.

Addressing a recent TEDMED conference in Washington, Dr Susan Desmond-Hellmann, UCSF's chancellor, put the challenge this way: "How does mobile monitoring become something more than a toy, or something interesting? How does it connect to how I'm cared for by my caregiver?"

About 300 doctors, health policy wonks and others attending that high-tech meeting received what was dubbed a "smartphone physical" from medical students using 10 of the latest devices. The Food and Drug Administration has approved a number of the gadgets for sale; others are experimental prototypes gathered for the demonstration by Nurture by Steelcase and the doctor website Medgadget.

"It's going to be our generation that adopts most of these," noted Shiv Gaglani, a Johns Hopkins medical student who helped organise the project.

The FDA cites industry estimates that 500 million smartphone users worldwide will use some type of health app by 2015. Today's apps mostly are educational tools, digital health diaries or reminders and fitness sensors. The new trend is toward more sophisticated medical apps, some that work with plug-in devices, that provide information a doctor might find useful.

Some of the devices sell by prescription or on drugstore shelves, while others like the diabetes monitor and blood pressure cuff have entered a new venue for medicine - the Apple store.

Simplicity is part of the idea. Take the AliveCor Heart Monitor. Snap it on like a smartphone case, place fingers on the sensors - no sticky wires on the chest - and you've got an EKG recording in 30 seconds. The FDA approved sale of the $199 device in December for doctors to use in exams or to prescribe for patients to use on themselves.

It doesn't measure as much as a full-scale EKG, and patients must email the recording to a doctor for analysis. But heart patients frequently experience palpitations that have ended by the time they reach a cardiologist -- and emailing an on-the-spot EKG reading might help the doctor figure out what happened, said AliveCor co-founder Dr Dave Albert.

"This is a brand-new technology. We're trying to understand how people will use it," said Albert, whose company also is seeking FDA permission to sell the device over the counter.

Welch Allyn's iExaminer taps the smartphone's camera to photograph deep inside the eye -- the orange view of the retina filling the phone's screen.

Similarly, CellScope is developing an otoscope - that magnifier doctors use to peer into the ear - that can snap a photo of the eardrum. It's not for sale yet, but might parents one day email that kind of picture to the pediatrician before deciding whether Johnny needs an office visit?

And University of Washington researchers are testing a way to measure lung function in people with asthma or emphysema as they blow onto the phone and it captures the sound. Today, those measurements require blowing into special machines.

Insurers are studying what smartphone technology to pay for. For example, health care giant Kaiser Permanente is about to begin a project in Georgia to sell the iBGStar alongside other diabetes monitors in its on-site pharmacies. The project will determine whether patients like the smartphone monitor, if it improves care - and if so, whether the readings should beam into patients' electronic health records, in Georgia and in other Kaiser regions.

But ultimately these devices may have a bigger role in developing countries, where full-size medical equipment is in short supply but smartphones are becoming common. Even in rural parts of the US it can take hours to drive to a specialist, while a primary care physician might quickly email that specialist a photo of, say, a diseased retina first to see whether the trip's really necessary.

"These tools make diagnosis at a distance much easier," said Dr Nicholas Genes, an emergency medicine professor at New York's Mount Sinai School of Medicine, who helped with TEDMED's smartphone physical.

10 top IT skills for 2013 revealed


10 top IT skills for 2013 revealed


10 top IT skills for 2013 revealed
CyberCoders has released new data about the skills most in demand for the highest paying technology jobs this year.

CALIFORNIA: Recruiting firm CyberCoders has released new data about the skills most in demand for the highest paying technology jobs this year. The company analysed over 10,000 tech companies and their hiring requirements to compile the list of the hottest skills in the tech space.

Data from CyberCoders reveals that candidates who have experience with iOS development, cloud computing programming and front-end development skills are most in demand in today's tech career landscape.

The top 10 tech skills for 2013, as per CyberCoders are listed below:

1. Mobile development (iOS, Android); 2. Cloud computing (AWS, Azure); 3. Front end development (HTML5, CSS3, Javascript); 4. UX/UI design; 5. Big Data (Hadoop, MongoDB, NoSQL); 6. C#; 7. Ruby on rails; 8. Java; 9. PHP; and 10. Linux

"A common theme among these technology skills is the need for open source, mobile, cloud or big data technologies, like iOS, Azure and Hadoop," said Matt Miller, CTO of CyberCoders.

Mumbai Indians face rampaging Chennai Super Kings at Wankhede


Mumbai Indians face rampaging Chennai Super Kings at Wankhede




Mumbai Indians face rampaging Chennai Super Kings at Wankhede
Earlier in the tournament, MI pipped CSK at fortress Chepauk by nine runs. MI have historically held sway over the southern powerhouse at home.

MUMBAI: Hosts Mumbai Indians, lying fourth on the points table, with 12 points, take on two-time champions and table-toppers Chennai Super Kings (18 points), in a potentially mouth-watering encounter, at the Wankhede Stadium, in the Indian T20 league, on Sunday.


While a 4 pm start, in peak summer, will make it steamy for the players, the contest itself is expected to be spicy, as all matches between these two teams always are.

The corresponding fixture last year (May 6) is a case in point. MI, thanks to the pyrotechnics of Dwayne Smith, chased down CSK's 173 for 8, off the last ball.

Earlier in the tournament, MI pipped CSK at fortress Chepauk by nine runs. MI have historically held sway over the southern powerhouse at home.

At the Wankhede, on true surfaces, they enjoy a 3-0 record and MS Dhoni, who hasn't enjoyed his time here, while leading India, especially this season, will hope that fortunes change.

They won't if Rohit Sharma and Dinesh Karthik, bulwarks of the MI middle-order, hang around. Rohit has been a transformed player since donning the captain's mantle and with 375 runs from 10 matches (Avg 53.57, SR 150), he is recreating the form that he displayed for Deccan Chargers, in 2009.

Karthik too has been in fine touch (331 runs, Avg 33.10, SR 139.66) and while others have posted bigger scores, one can't think of better quality knocks than the 86 he carved against Delhi Daredevils.

Too much though has depended on these two and Smith. Sachin Tendulkar, for all his greatness, has been a passenger.

One wonders how long his pride will allow him to continue now that regular skipper Ricky Ponting has already made a statement by sitting out.

With the ball, a lot will rest on the shoulders of Mitchell Johnson. If his swing and pace can dislodge the ageless and in-form Mike Hussey (485 runs @60.62, SR 132.15) early, MI can hope to make it 4-0 at the Big W. Johnson though would need better support from Lasith Malinga, who has looked overweight and off colour.

It's not all about Hussey with CSK though. Suresh Raina has got his touch back too as his hundred against Kings XI showed.

MS Dhoni is enjoying the challenges of batting higher up and has bullied even good attacks, scoring 300 runs @ 42.85, SR 171.42. Dwayne Bravo's bowling, especially at the death, has been potent.

CSK have also stolen a march over other franchises in the way they have backed young talent. Players like Mohit Sharma and Chris Morris have been thrown at the deep end and have succeeded.

MI have historically been poor at handling youngsters. Just ask Suryakumar Yadav, Jasprit Bumrah and Yuzvendra Chahal.

Will a young captain, surrounded by wise, old heads, be allowed to change that trend?

Shah Rukh is 'sorry' for dressing-room controversy


Shah Rukh is 'sorry' for dressing-room controversy


Shah Rukh is 'sorry' for dressing-room controversy
Shah Rukh Khan entered his team's dressing room during the innings break.

KOLKATA: Kolkata Knight Riders' emphatic eight-wicket win over the Rajasthan Royals at the Eden Gardens on Friday evening was marred by two controversies — one off the field and the other on it.


The principal protagonist in the off-the-field incident was KKR's principal owner Shah Rukh Khan, who entered his team's dressing room during the innings break in a clear breach of protocol. He was promptly asked to leave and a red-faced Shah Rukh had to beat a hasty retreat.

Asked about the incident during a midnight media interaction held at the the official team hotel, Shah Rukh chose to play it down.

"It's my face...people stop me from going to lot of places in stadiums nowadays. I just wanted to tell Gambhir 'well done'. I am sorry, it's my mistake. I forget the rules sometimes. I will try not to do it again, so that I'm not banned from here (Eden)," he added on apologetic note.

The Bollywood megastar had got into trouble last season at the Wankhede Stadium for threatening a security guard who had stopped his kids and their friends from entering the playing arena after KKR's match against Mumbai Indians. The Mumbai Cricket Association banned him for five years for his indiscretion.

Reminded about that incident ahead of KKR's away match against Mumbai Indians at the same venue on Tuesday, Shah Rukh said: "In retrospect, I should not have behaved like that. On the other hand, it's not something that I really think about. It's quite cool."

Asked what his plans were for the May 7 match, Shah Rukh said, "I don't want to sound politically incorrect but what will they do if I enter? Shoot me?"

In a lighter vein he added that he might resort to wearing a mask in order to get into the Wankhede Stadium. "I don't know...otherwise it has to be the masks, I'll have to wear them with a false moustache and stuff like that. But I am not going to take any chances. I will wait outside the Wankhede and cheer for my boys."

The on-field incident took place in the fourth over of the KKR innings bowled by Shane Watson. The Aussie all-rounder fielded the ball off his own bowling and threatened to throw down the stumps at the striker's end with Manvinder Bisla out of his crease.

Bisla cheekily urged Watson to go ahead and throw the ball instead of just threatening to do so. Words were exchanged between the two players, prompting rival skippers Gautam Gambhir and Rahul Dravid to get involved. Umpire Asad Rauf and Royals' Ajinkya Rahane played peacemakers as the storm in the proverbial tea cup blew over.

Later, Gambhir sought to clear the air saying he was not disrespectful Dravid during the incident. "Guys, u have got it all wrong. No harsh words exchanged between me n Rahul bhai. He was n will always be a respected teammate. No fuss plz," he wrote on his twitter page.

Gambhir actually ridiculed the way the incident was hyped. "Guess we are always obsessed wid some drama or spice. Sorry none existed between me and rahul. Always respect him," read his second tweet.

Warren Buffett Joins Twitter; 1000 Followers Per Minute


Warren Buffett Joins Twitter; 1000 Followers Per Minute








Bangalore: 82 year old billionaire, Warren Buffett, reportedly joined Twitter, and within a span of 45 minutes he picked up more than 45,000 followers. The numbers kept pouring in, and within 5 hours he already has 174,633 followers, reports Forbes.


Twitter soon verified Buffets's account, and people around the globe are excited to see him on twitter, even Bill Gates too is happy to see him on social networking site, and has welcomed him to twitter with his tweets. Other billionaires like Donald Trump and Mark Cuban, are also in his list of friends. Buffet's initial tweet "Warren is in the house" had a total response of 25,399 re-tweets.


Warren Buffett, well known for sharing his knowledge on business world and economy, would allow people to gain more insights on his views on them through twitter. However, the third-richest man in the world, having a current net worth of more than $57 billion, per Forbes estimation, could not be immediately reached for his comments.


Why you probably shouldn't answer that important email while flying

Why you probably shouldn't answer that important email while flying

in-flight-internet-635.jpg
Air passengers should avoid making important decisions whilst flying at high altitude, a leading British aerospace medicine expert has said.According to Professor David Gradwell from Kings College, travelling by plane can make it more difficult to think as change in air pressure means brain has less oxygen that diminishes performance.
Revealing a series of "don'ts" for would-be travellers, he said that aircraft cabins are pressurised but only to a level equivalent to that on top of a 6,000 to 8,000 feet mountain where the air is thinner and less oxygen reaches the brain.
In case technology improves to make Internet access more popular while flying, "it may not be the best place to answer that important email," he advised.
He added passengers should not fly east if they want to avoid jet lag, 'The Independent' reported.
Gradwell also advised passengers not to go indoors on arrival but get out in the daylight - as it is the quickest way to adjust your body clock.
He warned against sitting still for the entire flight, or rejecting the water offered by the flight attendants, as moving your legs and feet and staying well hydrated are the best defence against deep vein thrombosis, a hazard of long haul flying.

Google+ hangouts get Remote Desktop option, troubleshoot your friend's computer as you video chat

Google+ hangouts get Remote Desktop option, troubleshoot your friend's computer as you video chat

Google-plus-remotedesktop1.jpg
Google has added a remote desktop feature to Google+ hangouts.

This essentially means that users will be able to remotely access the computer of their Google+ contacts for the purpose of troubleshooting it, and will be able to video chat with them throughout the process.

To access the feature, you'll need to initiate a new hangout, select 'View more apps' from within the hangout, click on 'Add apps' and select Remote Desktop to download it. Following the installation of the app, you can simply invite the contact whose computer you want to troubleshoot and request for access. After the other user grants you permission, you'll be able be access the user's computer till he/ she ends the session.

Google's Daniel Caiafa informed via a Google+ post that the service is powered by the technology behind Chrome Remote Desktop.

While Google+ hangout already allowed Screensharing for virtual meetings, Remote Desktop will allow Google to compete with services like LogMeIn and GoToMyPC that allow remote desktop access for troubleshooting. Tech support executives also use these services to assist their customers. With a large number of users using Gmail, it will make more sense for them to use Google+ Hangouts, a service closely integrated with other Google products. Perhaps Google will be able to claim more new Google+ users after starting  this service.
 
Just a few days back, Google had announced the integration of App Activities into its Web search, taking Google+ integration a step forward. This essentially meant that Google search will now include results related to apps or services that offer logins via Google+. For instance, if a user searches for SoundCloud, the results listings page will display popular and aggregate user activity on the right side of search results, showing total number of Google+ users signed-in on SoundCloud and popular sound clips among them in order of the number of users listening to them.

New Galaxy S4 ad trashes Apple: iPhone is so old

New Galaxy S4 ad trashes Apple: iPhone is so old

Having gotten over its tame international launch of the S4, Samsung's American arm resumes its denigration of Apple, suggesting only old folks own an iPhone.
Oh, Dad. You're so dumb.
You thought it might be all over?
You thought that Samsung had tired of suggesting Apple was a fading brand for geriatrics?
You may also have thought that the world runs on Cabernet and common sense.
Yes, the Galaxy S4 was launched on a rocket of the beige and the tasteless. But those were just the corporate folks doing their thing.
Now, the American arm of Samsung has returned to its own style. This involves squishing Apple till it's cider.
Here we are at a high school graduation pool party presented by the latest Samsung ad.
The cooler people all have the new Galaxy S4. The slightly less cool people all have iPhones.
The slightly less cool people might loosely be described as parents. (I say "loosely," because parenting just isn't what it used to be, is it?)
As the party rolls on and the soft drinks flow, the iPhone-owning parents begin to realize just how retrograde they are.

These snotty kids can answer their phones by merely waving at them.
They can kiss their phones together to transmit data to each other, too. It's as if the tactile love that was so prevalent in the '60s has now been transposed to the gadgets of the '10s.
"So some smartphones are smarter than other smartphones?" muses one graybeard, who looks like he's been addled by too much Cointreau and lawyering.
Meanwhile, the Beverly Hills 902013s continue to humiliate the olds with their technical wizardry.
Yes, the Galaxy S4 even works as your TV remote, you dye-haired daddy doddering toward dotage.
This tweaking of the Apple cheek has been going on for a while now, and it's becoming enjoyably brutal.
The positioning of Apple as a faded dame might remind some of Mac vs. PC, when the pitiful blobbery of Microsoft was exposed by Apple for all to see and laugh at.
Shoe, meet other foot.

Apple fail should be a lesson for Microsoft

Apple fail should be a lesson for Microsoft

By market-acceptance standards, failures of Apple hardware products are rare. But when the potential for weak demand is evident, it's pretty good at fixing the problem. That's a lesson for Microsoft.
The iPad Mini made Apple's thicker, heavier Retina iPad easy to forget. Can Microsoft act fast with Suface?
The iPad Mini made Apple's thicker, heavier Retina iPad easy to forget. Can Microsoft act fast with Suface?
Apple is good at addressing design oversights. Will Microsoft be as adept?
The Retina iPad, for example, violated Apple's design creed: products should get thinner and lighter -- aka, cooler. Not thicker and heavier.
But Apple fixed this quickly (six month later) with the iPad Mini trifecta: thinner, lighter, cheaper. And the iPad, reinvented as the Mini, has been a runaway success.
Now that Microsoft is in the business of making tablets, can it act fast when it commits product-design sins?
Surface is not a success -- yet. The Surface Pro is too big and heavy (and expensive), according to IDC and plenty of other observers. (It is a tablet, after all, despite Microsoft's valiant attempt to categorize it as a PC).
And the RT model is hampered by performance and an unpopular operating system, and it's out of sync -- like the Pro -- with the market shift to smaller tablets.
NPD DisplaySearch told CNET this week that Microsoft will bring out a 7.5-inch tablet that sources say may be $400, or possibly cheaper. But that tablet will happen later, not sooner, according to DisplaySearch.
That's a problem, because both the RT and Pro, I think, are going to languish in the coming months. And I have a feeling that products like Acer's leaked $380 Iconia 8-inch tablet will not fill the void.
And let's not forget Android. I'm guessing that vendors like Asus and Hewlett-Packard are going to look increasingly to Android for cool, inexpensive designs.
Microsoft appears to be serious about doing the Apple thing -- where it designs both the software and hardware -- and wants to make Windows 8 tablets a success. But will it be able to emulate Apple's successful hardware formula? A quick (very quick) refresh would be in order.
The clock is ticking.

Saturday, 4 May 2013

Today`s Quotes

“Keep away from people who try to belittle your ambitions. Small people always do that, but the really great make you feel that you, too, can become great.”

Gayle would not like to bowl at himself!

Gayle would not like to bowl at himself!


GAYLE'S GIFT: Chris Gayle presenting his West Indies T20 jersey to Rohan Pate for display in the 'Blades of Glory' museum. Photo: Vivek Bendre
GAYLE'S GIFT: Chris Gayle presenting his West Indies T20 jersey to Rohan Pate for display in the 'Blades of Glory' museum. Photo: Vivek Bendre
Chris Gayle, who donated his West Indies T20 jersey to the ‘Blades of Glory’ cricket museum here on Friday, promised to hand over the bat with which he hit the record score after the IPL concluded this year “I need the bat for the remaining games,” said the RCB opener, who has scored 505 runs in 11 games.
Pune Warriors India, at the receiving end when Gayle smashed an unbeaten 175, escaped further mauling on Thursday when he walked back after scoring only 21.
Not many bowlers will want to face the left-handed opener in a T20 game.
“In those kind of situation, I sure don’t want to be a bowler, especially when a batsman is doing all those things. The wicket was really good (at Chinnaswamy stadium). I was actually looking at a team total of 180 but I ended up getting 175.
“These things happen and every batsman has his day. That day was mine and I capitalised on it, for which I am very happy. Hopefully, in future I can do a bit more.
“There is a lot of talent here, it will be difficult to make the team.
“With so many talented players here, I am not needed,” the West Indian replied to a hypothetical question about the possibility of representing India.
“They have won the T20 World Cup, were the No.1 team and also 60-overs World Cup champion once.
“India plays good cricket as well. If I get a chance, would definitely like to play. There is nothing I can do at this point of time, maybe after representing the West Indies”.

IT employment is expected to grow 3 times over the next 3 years: Infopark

IT employment is expected to grow 3 times over the next 3 years: Infopark


IT employment is expected to grow 3 times over the next 3 years: Infopark Despite the slow growth in information technology recruitment in the country, the Infopark in Kochi has projected a healthy growth in recruitment over the next few years. IT employment is expected to grow three times over the next three years at the Infopark.

Since its inception in 2004, Infopark has created over 3.4 million square feet of space and has provided employment to nearly 18,500 IT professionals. Around 134 IT companies have taken space in the park.
TCS and Cognizant are constructing their own campuses of 1.5 million square feet each in the Infopark. Both the companies are expected to add 12,000 people each in the next three years.
In 2012-13, the Infopark reported an export revenue of Rs 1,350 crore, representing a 23 % growth over the previous year. The facilities of TCS and Cognizant are expected to give a boost to the export revenue from the park.
Infopark CEO Gigo Joseph said that the rentals in Infopark are lower by almost 30 % as compared to other South Indian cities. The attrition is as low as 5 %. He said that the employees in the park will see a three-fold rise in the next 3 years.

Protect your skin from getting tanned


Protect your skin from getting tanned



Protect your skin from getting tanned
Protect your skin from getting tanned

When you read about protecting your skin from the sun, you may feel that you have heard it all before.

The worst thing is, Ultraviolet rays of the sun are not visible and cannot be felt. The best way to protect your skin is to seek shade when the harmful Ultraviolet rays are at their peak. And if you are heading outdoors, you must wear protective clothing, a broad-brimmed hat and sunglasses. Here are a few simple points you need to keep in mind.

Plan your day well in advance. The best thing you can do for your skin is to avoid the sun from 10.30 am to 3.30 pm.

It is best to wear loose-fitting clothes that cover as much skin as possible. Check the kind of clothes you are wearing — closely woven fabrics that cast a dense shadow when held up to light are perfect to protect you from the harsh glares of the sun.

Protect your eyes. Wear sunglasses that wrap around the sides of the face so that Ultraviolet rays don't reach your eyes.

If your skin burns easily, the best way to protect it is to use sunscreen. A generous application of a broad spectrum SPF 30+ sunscreen would do. Reapply it every two hours.

Always apply sunscreen before stepping out. Prepare a mixture of yogurt and lemon juice and apply it daily on your skin before taking a bath.

Rubbing peeled potato skin over the affected area helps reduce tan.

Applying cucumber on the affected area is also good.

Prepare a paste of sandalwood powder, coconut and almond oil, and apply it on your skin for half an hour.

Applying Aloe Vera gel daily helps protect your skin from tanning.

Papaya is a natural skin-lightening agent. Rub papaya pulp on tanned skin.

Microsoft goes cheap to win smartphone market share


Microsoft goes cheap to win smartphone market share



Microsoft goes cheap to win smartphone market share
Microsoft-powered phones now have 3.2% of the US smartphone market, compared to 39% for Apple and 52% for Google's Android system.
SEATTLE: Microsoft's phone chief hates to call the new Nokia Lumia 521 cheap, but the lower-priced smartphone launching in the United States is the company's boldest move yet to win mass market share from leaders Apple and Samsung.

The world's largest software company has so far focused on putting its Windows Phone software into expensive, high-end devices - chiefly from Nokia and HTC.

But the new model will go on sale at Walmart later this month at an unsubsidised price under $150, relatively cheap for a new phone running up-to-date software without a long-term contract.

"There is an opportunity for us to offer a very high quality device in the mainstream," said Terry Myerson, head of the Windows Phone unit, at Microsoft's campus near Seattle last week. "That's where we've made progress in the last couple of months and it's a strategy we'll continue to explore in the United States."

The Nokia Lumia 521 went on sale on the Home Shopping Network (HSN) last week, where it has already sold out. The 4G phone, sold overseas as the Nokia 520, is essentially a mid-range phone with some high-end features, such as 4-inch touch screen, five megapixel camera and high-definition video display.

Next week the phone will go on sale at less than $150 at Walmart, along with T-Mobile US' $30 per month unlimited data and text plan, which works out much cheaper over the long run than heavily subsidised iPhones and upscale Android devices that generally come with pricy long-term contracts.

The early popularity of the Lumia 521 on HSN is a minor boost for Microsoft, whose mobile plans have stuttered and stumbled since Apple's iPhone destroyed its early dominance in the smartphone market in 2007.

After completely redesigning its software, Microsoft-powered phones now have 3.2% of the US smartphone market, compared to 39% for Apple and 52% for Google's Android system, according to comScore.

Nokia, which now only makes smartphones running Windows, sold 5.6 million of its Lumia handsets in the first quarter, up 27% from the previous quarter, although that is still dwarfed by 37 million iPhone sales.

Microsoft does not detail overall Windows phone sales or financials, but did say last quarter that phone-related revenue rose by $259 million, which includes licensing revenue from Android phones, which use some technology patented by Microsoft.

Windows phones tend to fare better overseas, where they have as much as 20% share in some markets such as Mexico and Poland, and almost 7 percent in Britain, according to Microsoft.

That is partly because the role of powerful carriers such as AT&T and Verizon Wireless, which dominate US phone retail, is less pronounced in overseas markets.

"AT&T and Verizon have been great partners," said Myerson. "But where the market dynamics are different, and where the operators play a different role, we have done better."

Heavy up-front subsidies from AT&T and Verizon, in return for long-term service contracts, mean US customers can afford the best hardware from Apple and Samsung. Even though Windows phones are also subsidised, Myerson admits it has been hard to break that lock on the home market.

"It (subsidisation) is a compelling business model for them. If you are Samsung, Apple, AT&T or Verizon, it's where everything's working, you are growing share, you are growing profits," said Myerson. "If you are an incumbent with a successful business model, you're not going to be jumping to throw it out."

As a challenger to those incumbents, Myerson says Microsoft has to differentiate on more than just price.

After introducing "killer hardware," he says the next task for Windows phones is to leverage Microsoft's Office and Xbox products to make a genuinely new phone experience, whether as a work tool or advanced toy.

"I don't think we've come near to the full potential," he said. "Those are our two dimensions here, Office and Xbox. We want to bring to life getting work done and bring to life that serious fun, here on this thing in your pocket. That's going to develop over time."

Myerson played down reports that Microsoft was working on a phone of its own, to follow up on its Surface tablet.

"Nokia's doing a great job," he said. "They really are receiving all of our go-to-market energy right now."

Microsoft To Sell Lumia 521 Through Walmart


Microsoft To Sell Lumia 521 Through Walmart







Lumia 521

Bangalore: In search of widening its user base, Microsoft Corp plans to sell Nokia Lumia 521, at Walmart later this month at an unsubsidized price under $150, reports Business Insider.


Walmart is believed to start carrying the phone next week. The Nokia Lumia 521 was sold out at the first retailer, the Home Shopping Network last week. The device is a T-Mobile specific variant of the Lumia 520, 4G mid-range Smartphone that was debuted at Mobile World Congress in February. It offers certain high-end features like 4-inch touch screen, five megapixel camera and 8GB storage expandable to 64GB.


As Walmart will be selling Lumia 521 with T-Mobile’s $30/month unlimited data and text plan, the phone doesn’t require a long-term contract and will work out much cheaper than heavily subsidized iPhones and upscale Android devices that generally come with pricy long-term contracts.


If the sale turns out to be successful at Walmart, Microsoft may have found another way to attract more users to its Windows Phone platform. The more users, the more app developers it will attract and hence more apps will bring in more users.


Currently Windows Phones have only 3.2 percent market share in entire U.S., compared to 39 percent for Apple and 52 percent for Android.

Samsung Galaxy S4 earns Pentagon security nod

Samsung Galaxy S4 earns Pentagon security nod

The Pentagon gives official approval to any Samsung device protected by the Knox security software, which for now includes just the Galaxy S4.
Samsung's Galaxy S4 has been approved for government use.
Samsung's Galaxy S4 has been approved for government use.
Samsung is now clear to start pitching its new flagship phone to the government.
The handset maker announced Friday that its Knox-enabled mobile devices have been approved by the Pentagon for government use. Samsung's Knox software offers high-level encryption, a VPN feature, and a way to separate personal data from work data. The software also enables IT administrators to manage a mobile device through specific policies.
For now, the Galaxy S4 is the only Samsung device equipped with Knox. But the company promises that other smartphones as well as tablets will receive the security software.

The thumb's up from the Pentagon means that the S4 and future Knox devices can be used by U.S. government and military departments that tap into the Department of Defense networks. Access to these networks requires high security standards, and the S4 is the first Android phone to meet the requirements, according to Samsung.
The new security clearance also opens up certain types of businesses as potential new customers for Samsung.
"We are very pleased to announce that the U.S. Department of Defense has approved Samsung Knox-enabled devices for use in DoD networks," Samsung Mobile President JK Shin said in a statement. "This approval enables other government agencies and regulated industries such as health care and financial services to adopt Samsung Galaxy smartphones and tablets. This is a significant milestone for Samsung as we work to grow our relationships within government and large corporate enterprises."
On Thursday, the Pentagon gave the same approval to BlackBerry devices with the BlackBerry 10 operating system, which translates into its Q10 and Z10 smartphones and Playbook tablets.
In the past, BlackBerry was the go-to vendor for government and big business due to the high-level security on its devices. But Apple and Android have begun carving out of a chunk of this lucrative market. Samsung in particular is aiming to muscle in on BlackBerry's territory with help from its Knox software.
Part of the Samsung for Enterprise (SAFE) initiative, Knox comes built into the operating system and addresses all major security holes in Android, according to the company. Knox's ability to keep personal and business data separate matches a similar feature in BB10 called BlackBerry Balance.
Up to now at least, BlackBerry hasn't appeared to be concerned about Samsung's efforts.
"Whatever any of our competitors announce, one thing won't change. The most secure mobile computing solution is a BlackBerry device running on a BlackBerry platform," David Smith, executive vice president of mobile computing for BlackBerry, said in February.
The government's nod to both Samsung and BlackBerrry still leaves Apple out in the cold.
The iPhone maker is also seeking approval from the Department of Defense for its mobile devices. Specifically, the DOD needs to certify the iOS 6 operating system as secure enough to be used by defense agencies and the military. However, that approval is expected within the next few weeks, The Wall Street Journal reported Wednesday.
Passing the government's security test doesn't automatically guarantee a sale. Approvals "do not directly result in product orders, but facilitate the process by eliminating the need for security reviews at the individual DOD organization level," a Defense Department spokesman told the Journal.
Samsung, BlackBerry, and potentially Apple will still need to fight over lucrative government contracts just as they do in the business world. But assuming Apple does win security approval, all three rivals will duke it out on an even playing field.

Apple extends lead over Samsung in U.S. smartphones

Apple extends lead over Samsung in U.S. smartphones

Apple's iOS also took market share away from Google's Android in the first quarter, according to ComScore.
Samsung Galaxy S4 flanked by the iPhone 5 and HTC One 
Maybe it's time to hold off on the Apple negativity.
The iPhone franchise captured 39 percent of the U.S. smartphone market in the first quarter, extending its lead over Samsung, which garnered 21.7 percent of the market, according to research firm ComScore.
Interestingly, Apple's iOS took market share away from Google's Android, which traditionally has seen more rapid growth.

Apple saw its smartphone market share rise by nearly 3 percentage points in the quarter, while Samsung's share inched up slightly. The next three largest handset vendor, HTC, Motorola, and LG, all lost market share in the period.
The first quarter was fairly quiet when it came to new smartphones hitting the market, with heavy hitters such as the Samsung Galaxy S4 and HTC One not debuting in the U.S. until early in the second quarter.
As a result, it appears the incumbents continued to flourish, giving the edge to the iPhone 5 and its older models, as well as the Galaxy S3.
The numbers come as Apple continues to get hit with concern that the company has lost its edge, and that it won't be able to continue the torrid pace of growth it has enjoyed for the last several years. In addition, there's an increasing view that the competition, particularly Samsung, has caught up.
But the first-quarter results show Apple still has some mojo left, although it may fade in the second quarter as several high-profile phones go on sale.
Google's Android remains the largest platform, with 52 percent of the market, although it lost more than 1 percentage point of market share. Microsoft's Windows Phone was the only other gainer, inching up to 2.9 percent.

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