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Showing posts with label Sci & Tech. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sci & Tech. Show all posts

Northern Railway Line in Sri Lanka tested before next month`s opening

Written By Unknown on August 30, 2013 | 1:07:00 PM

Sri Lanka Railways (SLR) authorities today conducted a test run on the Northern Railway Line which is currently being re-built from Vavuniya to Kankasanthurai, in Jaffna peninsula.

The train left the Omanthai railway station at 9.30 this morning and it reached Kilinochchi railway station at 10.10 a.m. Sri Lanka Railways sources said.

The train ran on the newly built track up to a speed of 100 km per hour.

The last passenger train on this line ran on January 19, 1985. Tamil Tiger terrorists bombed the Yal Devi train at Kokavil on that day killing 34 people and destroying the train tracks. The attack effectively ended the north-south rail transport.

Sri Lanka will officially launch the train service on the Northern Line up to the former rebel stronghold on September 14, Ministry of Transport announced.

President Mahinda Rajapaksa will launch the train service to Kilinochchi and he will also declare open the newly built Kilinochchi Railway Station.

Kilinochchi was the capital of the de facto state run by the Tamil Tiger terrorist outfit Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam. The Sri Lankan Army captured Kilinochchi in 2009.

Minister of Transport Kumar Welgama and other Ministers as well as the senior officials of Ministry and Sri Lanka Railway are to participate in the ceremony.

Sri Lanka`s Northern Line from Vavuniya to Kankasanthurai in the northernmost tip of the island was completely destroyed by the Tamil Tiger terrorists during the three-decade long war. The rebels uprooted the rail tracks to build reinforced underground bunkers.

The train line is now being reconstructed by the India Railway Construction International Ltd. (IRCON) with the assistance of the Indian government.

Currently the trains operate only to Omanthai, ten kilometers north of Vavuniya. The construction of the whole Northern Line up to Kankasanthurai would be completed by the end of 2014 and all the previous railway stations which were destroyed in the three decade war are to be reestablished, the Ministry says.

via http://www.lankanewspapers.com

Indian Government launches data website for public

On the lines of the USA and the UK, the union government on Thursday launched an open data website, where information on various sectors like health, transport, sanitation and agriculture was made available. The website, data.gov.in, has been developed by the National Informatics Centre (NIC). Currently, it hosts over 3,500 data sets from 49 government departments which everybody is free to access and use.

Some of the released datasets include "State-wise recorded forest area of the country", "Gross irrigated area", "District-wise release of funds from centre share upto 31st March 2013" and more. Over 1,000 of the available datasets pertain to agriculture alone.

"Government is not the sole proprietor of data. All forms of data must be shared, barring those that are important for security. There is also a responsibility on those who use and interpret this data. They must realize that it is for development," said Kapil Sibal, union minister of communications and information technology, at the launch event. Sam Pitroda, who joined via videoconference, said this project could help implementation of services at district and panchayat level.

A contest organised by the NIC and the National Association of Software and Services Companies (NASSCOM) is in the offing too. Called the"#OpenDataApps Challenge", it invites entrepreneurs, start-ups, and people from civil society to create apps using this data. Participants can send in entries by August 20 to compete for three first prizes worth Rs. 1 lakh each and three second prizes of Rs 50,000 each.

Earlier this year, the Planning Commission had organized a hackathon in the country, inviting apps using similar data sets. Web developer Guneet Narula, who had participated and won in the hackathon, feels that this data.gov initiative is a "step in the right direction".

"The hackathon was just a starting point. This has a different objective. As a developer, I may not be able to see how two data sets relate. With a team where there are people who can analyse it that way, it may have useful results," says Narula.

Kantanu Kundu, CEO of a2z apps says he wishes the government would come up with an API (Application Programming Interface) as well. "That would excite app developers who want to use such data," he says.

A similar website called data.gov.uk shares UK government data with the public. It was launched in 2010. The US has had a data.gov website since 2009. 


via TOI

LG’s curved OLED TV hits European market

Written By Unknown on August 26, 2013 | 1:45:00 AM

LG Electronics has launched the sales of its curved OLED TV in Germany, company officials said Sunday.

Slated to hold a launching event of the product at the HIFI Profis electronics trade show in Frankfurt on Wednesday, the home appliance maker said it would soon begin selling the product in other European countries.

“LG is fully committed to delivering the most advanced OLED TVs to European customers,” said Lee In-kyu, vice president and head of the TV division at LG’s home entertainment company. “With next-generation display technology and an ultrathin curved design, our curved OLED TV represents the beginning of a new era in home entertainment.”

The TV market will see 7 million curved TVs sold worldwide by 2016, with 30 percent of them sold in Europe by 2017, according to Display Search, a research firm,

The curved TV is designed to enable viewers to experience rich colors through LG’s proprietary WRGB (white, red, green and blue pixel) technology and thorough immersion with the concave display, LG said.

The premium TV with a 4.3-mm-wide body weighing 17 kilograms has been certified by international product testing institutes including TUV Rheinland, Intertek and VDE for its unsurpassed picture quality.

via http://tinyurl.com/kzlnv6h

Oldest globe of New World discovered

Written By Unknown on August 25, 2013 | 11:40:00 PM

Scientists have discovered the world’s oldest globe of the New World, dating back to the early 1500s, and it is carved onto ostrich eggs.

The previously-unknown globe, which is about the size of a grapefruit, was made from the lower halves of two ostrich eggs, and dates from the very early 1500s.

Until now, it was thought that the oldest globe to show the New World was the “Lenox Globe” at the New York Public Library, but researchers said that this Renaissance ostrich egg globe was actually used to cast the copper Lenox globe, putting its date to 1504 AD.

The globe reported in The Portolan, the journal of the Washington Map Society, reflects the knowledge gleaned by Christopher Columbus and other very early European explorers including Amerigo Vespucci after whom America was named. The author points to Florence Italy as where the globe was made, and offers evidence that the engraver was influenced by or worked in the workshop of Leonardo da Vinci.

“When I heard of this globe, I was initially sceptical about its date, origin, geography and provenance, but I had to find out for myself,” said author S. Missinne, an independent Belgian research scholar in the journal article.

“After all no one had known of it, and discoveries of this type are extremely rare. I was excited to look into it further, and the more I did so, and the more research that we did, the clearer it became that we had a major find,” he said.

The globe was purchased in 2012 at the London Map Fair from a dealer who said it had been in an “important European collection” for many decades.

via http://tinyurl.com/l7p2w5c

Science and politics make for a poisonous mix

Written By Unknown on August 23, 2013 | 11:26:00 PM

Steven Pinker, professor of psychology at Harvard University and author of such popular science books as “The Blank Slate,” recently wrote an essay for the New Republic in defense of science. From left and right, he notes, from intellectuals as well as from anti-intellectuals, science is under attack for its arrogance, vulgarity and narrowness of vision.

Why is this happening? Pinker asks. Because, he says, science is intruding on the humanities, disciplines lacking in vitality or any real purpose of their own, and the intrusion is resented. Far from deriding science as a campaign to diminish and oversimplify — to reduce beauty to brain chemistry, say, or ethics to natural selection — the humanities should welcome science as a source of new inspiration: “Surely our conceptions of politics, culture, and morality have much to learn from our
best understanding of the physical universe and of our makeup as a species.”

No doubt that’s true. And while we’re praising science, let’s agree that Pinker is right to call it a force for enormous social good in all the indisputable ways he mentions. Fine. Intelligent critics of “scientism” — the term they’ve adopted for science gone wrong — wouldn’t deny any of this.
Their most valid complaints are different — and Pinker ignores them, perhaps because he hasn’t understood them. Put simply, science is a force for good so long as it’s done well and its limits are recognized. But science isn’t always done well, and its limits aren’t always recognized. When it’s done badly or pushes past its proper bounds yet still expects to command respect, that’s scientism.

The most important limit to science arises from the distinction between facts and values. This isn’t to deny that science can shed light on values — lately an active area of research. Science can make moral values intelligible in physical terms. It can reveal what’s happening in the brain when a person wrestles with a moral dilemma; it can explain how certain moral instincts might confer an evolutionary advantage, or why they might persist. It can show that the supposed empirical basis for some moral values is simply false — for instance, as Pinker puts it, that “there is no such thing as fate, providence, karma, spells, curses, augury, divine retribution or answered prayers.”

“Though the scientific facts do not by themselves dictate values,” Pinker goes on, “they certainly hem in the possibilities.” He’s right about this — but the second point, though interesting, is much less important than the first. Science can’t dictate values. That’s what matters. And because it can’t dictate values, it can’t dictate courses of action.

Pinker forgets this almost as soon as he’s said it: In combination “with a few unexceptionable convictions — that all of us value our own welfare and that we are social beings who impinge on each other and can negotiate codes of conduct — the scientific facts militate toward a defensible morality, namely adhering to principles that maximize the flourishing of humans and other sentient beings.”

This emerging “de facto morality of modern democracies” provides “the moral imperatives we face today.”

Really? Perhaps Pinker needs to widen his circle of acquaintances. Ideas of what constitutes human flourishing vary a lot even within relatively homogeneous societies. Variation from society to society, or culture to culture, is far bigger. How to combine the principles that maximize the flourishing of humans is disputable — and always will be. The conflicting demands of individual liberty, family loyalty and social solidarity (to name just three of many such principles) can’t be resolved by means of facts. There’s no one right formula.

Claiming otherwise isn’t a harmless error. It’s politically toxic. If Pinker believes that the facts are militating toward a scientific morality, what does that say about the people who take a different view of human flourishing? You no longer have a good-faith disagreement between people with different values — you have a clash between scientific enlightenment and intellectual backwardness. That’s not the basis for friendly interaction. It’s no accident that the more aggressive kinds of scientism — the so-called New Atheism springs to mind — are bullying and intolerant. Intolerance isn’t conducive to human flourishing.

If science expects to command respect, it should not only be aware of its own limits, but it also should be practiced to a high standard. Pinker seems to take for granted that it will be. He applauds the scientific temperament. The defining practices of science “are explicitly designed to circumvent the errors and sins to which scientists, being human, are vulnerable.”

Science is modest, you see — intent on testing itself. Any movement that “fails to nurture opportunities for the falsification of its own beliefs” does not qualify as scientific, he says.
Quite right. But you’d be hard-pressed to argue that all parts of the climate-science community, for instance, had nurtured opportunities for the falsification of their own beliefs. The e-mails published during the Climategate scandal suggest that was not a priority. Groupthink, getting with the program and extreme impatience with dissent seem more to the fore in some climate-science quarters than zealous self- criticism.

Climate science, a far-flung family of loosely related disciplines, is unusual because it has become closely aligned with a set of costly and controversial policy proposals. This political orientation raises a question: Which comes first — the science of climate or the art of persuasion?

Many climate scientists believe global warming requires urgent measures to cut greenhouse-gas emissions. They look despairingly at governments unable or unwilling to respond and campaign all the more aggressively. They have a case (I’m for a gradually increasing carbon tax, if you’re wondering), but their standing as advocates and activists has undermined their authority as disinterested scientists.

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, which will release its fifth assessment report on global warming next year, is likewise seen by many as an advocacy organization rather than a neutral compiler of scientific evidence.

This has done great harm: The scientist-advocates overreached and diminished their own effectiveness.

What to do about climate change is indeed a political question. Good science, along with good economics, is needed to inform the political judgment, but to claim that the science is settled and that the right policy is dictated by undisputed facts is false. The science isn’t settled, and even if it were, it wouldn’t dictate the policy.

Voters know this, which is why the tactic didn’t work. Science, for its own sake and everybody else’s, should keep a cautious distance from politics.

Source: http://tinyurl.com/n5xfasn

Japan to support 3D printer development - Video

The Japanese government plans to support domestic makers to develop cost-effective 3D printers.
The printers use computer data to produce solid three-dimensional objects made of resin, metal or other powdered materials. The process is similar to printing images on paper. The printers are expected to change manufacturing processes.

Officials from the industry ministry say they hope to catch up with the United States and Germany in public-private sector cooperation for 3D printing.

They plan to launch a 3D-printer project next April and to allocate it about 45 million dollars in the budget plan for fiscal 2014.

Source: http://tinyurl.com/mjls3et

Parking network

Networked to a central server, feeding real-time data accessed by mobile devices, thousands of car and two-wheeler parking slots could just turn ultra tech-savvy. But only if the parking policy - currently on the drawing boards -- adopts the technology, a version of which is to be launched soon in the City by a leading parking management system.

Faced with inadequate off-street, multi-level parking lots, the policy on the Bruhat Bangalore Mahanagara Palike (BBMP) agenda would have to rely heavily on finite on-street parking spaces. But this can work only with a technology-driven, dynamic system far advanced than the rudimentary ones now in operation on Brigade Road and Commercial Street.

“The mode of parking fee payment should be flexible, through card or cash; the machines should be networked to a central command system to make the collection systems transparent and monitor usage patterns,” explained N Sathyanarayanan from the Central Parking Services (CBS).

CBS currently manages parking slots for 10,000 cars and 8,000 two-wheelers at the Bengaluru International Airport (BIA), Baiyyappanahalli and SV Road Metro Stations besides several malls, IT firms and corporate hospitals. The BIA parking lot handles 2,800 cars, the capacity of which is expected to increase by 10 per cent after the ongoing Terminal-1 expansion. On completion of Namma Metro phase-1, 12 more stations will have parking lots.

The Palike could look at the CBS network and its soon-to-be-launched Mobile App as a pilot, for city-wide applications. “The App will have GPS connectivity and will link to parking lots from different zones.

We already have a connection with the City traffic police B-Trac server, where they send a query to our server and pull out information from the database. The information then flashes on the B-Trac website. Right now, this link has only limited functionality without an App,” said Sathyanarayanan. The CBS App will be part of a comprehensive upgrade of its server, to be ready in 15 days.

Monitoring usage patterns

By adopting a networked parking system with a central command, BBMP could remotely monitor usage patterns. Tracking parking slot use based on zones, roads and days of the week, the Palike could fix differential rates. The technology allows this, although a move to fix such a differential system for peak hours and weekends in the parking policy was turned down by the State government.

Recently, the government had approved a parking policy for Bangalore along with other city corporations in the State. The Palike had earlier given its nod for the policy with a few modifications, after the Directorate of Urban Land Transport submitted a draft. The Transport Training Institute and Consultancy is now expected to come out with a parking action plan by this year-end. 

Source: http://tinyurl.com/lo3nkgt

'Female sperm' and 'Male eggs' - Gay and Lesb families are happy

A New research from Japan has suggested that it may be possible in the future for scientists to grow male and female reproductive cells from the opposite gender. In other words, to create sperm from women and eggs from men.

Katsuhiko Hayashi of Kyoto University in Japan has published research in which skin cells from mice were used to create primordial germ cells or PGCs. These cells, the common precursor of both male and female sex cells, were then developed into both sperm and eggs. Using these live-births were created via in vitro fertilisation.

Although the techniques involved are still in their infancy, the possibilities for reproductive medicine are startling. Not only could the research of Hayashi and his senior professor Mitinori Saitou allow infertile women to have babies by creating eggs from their skin cells, but it might make it possible for sperm and eggs cells to be created from either males or females.

The process begins by extracting pluripotent stem cells from early-stage embryos and somatic cells, and then converting these into PGCs using ‘signalling molecules’. These germ cells were transplanted into the ovaries and testes of living mice to develop. Once these cells were mature they were extracted and used to fertilise one another in vitro.

The initial research took place in October 2012, with the live-births only a ‘side effect’ used to demonstrate that the creation of PGCs had been successful. Since then, scientists around the world have been realising the full potential of the research, and the team involved is now exploring how their work might transfer to humans.x

Writing in Scientific American, David Cyranoski explains that other researchers have replicated the production of PGCs but have been unable to produce any live births. The scientists involved also have many other hurdles to overcome including the production ‘fragile’ and ‘misshapen’ eggs.

“But,” writes Cyranoski, “the most formidable challenge will be repeating the mouse PGC work in humans.” This is because the ‘signalling molecules’ used to create the PGCs are vastly more complicated in humans than in mice. Research is further hampered by restricted access to human embryos.

The Japanese team led by Saituou and Hayashi are currently using monkey embryos as a stepping stone between the species and when speaking to Scientific American, Hayashi predicts that they could succeed with primates within ‘5-10 years’, with the creation of human PGCs following ‘shortly after’.

However, even if the process is successfully transferred to monkeys there will still be many dangers that may take years to address. It’s already known that embryonic stem cells developed in laboratories frequently pick up various genetic mutations and epigenetic irregularities. Even if healthy offspring are created from this method, scientists have questioned how many generations would have to be observed before they are considered genetically ‘safe’.

Scientists agree that research is compelling but that it will be many years before anything like a viable treatment for infertility might be made available to the public.

This would allow gay couples to have children genetically their own, although many scientists are sceptical about whether it is possible to create sperm from female cells, which lack the male Y chromosome.

This breakthrough could unlock many of the secrets of egg and sperm production, leading to new drug treatments for infertility.

Defects in sperm and egg development are the biggest cause of infertility but, because many of the key stages occur in the womb, scientists have struggled to study the process in detail.

However, safety and ethical concerns mean that artificial sperm and eggs are much further away from use.

'Whether one builds the boundaries on religion or just on an internal sense or of right and wrong, these are important. In this field, it is not "anything goes".'

Scientists at Newcastle University in US claimed to have made sperm from embryonic stem cells earlier this year but the research paper has been retracted.

Dr Allan Pacey, a Sheffield University expert in male fertility said: 'Ultimately this may help us find a cure for male infertility. Not necessarily by making sperm in the laboratory, I personally think that is unlikely, but by identifying new targets for drugs or genes that may stimulate sperm production to occur naturally.

'This is a long way off, but it is a laudable dream.'

Dr Peter Saunders, of the Christian Medical Fellowship, said that IVF should be the preserve of married couples.

'The question is, why are we creating artificial gametes (eggs and sperm) and aborting 200,000 babies a year when there are many, many couples willing to adopt?'

Josephine Quintavalle, of the campaign group Comment on Reproductive Ethics, warned that any flaws in the artificial sperm or eggs could be passed on to future generations.

Anthony Ozimic, of the Society for the Protection of Unborn Children, said: 'The use of artificial gametes in reproduction would distort and damage relations between family members.

'There are no instances of any major medical advance achieved by abandoning basic ethical principles such as safeguarding the right to life.'

Tirunelveli to get power from recycled garbage

The Corporation has enlisted the services of a Madurai-based firm to generate electricity from recycled waste collected from the Ramaiyanpatti garbage dump.

The company proposes to generate 2 MW of electricity every hour, which will be sold to the Tamil Nadu Generation and Distribution Corporation.

AAPL Infra Private Limited, Madurai, in partnership with Rochem Separations Systems India Private Limited, Mumbai, won the open tender for the project. The Corporation will supply garbage to the company with the revenue generated to be shared on a 50:50 basis.

As per the proposal submitted by the Madurai firm, the project, to be executed under DFBOT (Design, Finance, Build, Operate and Transfer) mode by establishing the plant on 15 acres of land, will have an outlay of Rs.72 crore and generate 2 MW power (for every 60 minutes) from 160 tonnes of garbage using Concord Blue Technology, the only commercially proven non-polluting solution that transforms nearly any form of local waste into a variety of renewable fuels and electricity.

The garbage arriving at the Ramaiyanpatti dumping yard will be stored at a particular spot and covered to eliminate the stench. The inert waste, which will be 15 per cent of the total quantum of garbage used for power generation, will be utilised for land-filling. The waste water from the power generation unit will be recycled through the reverse osmosis process.

MG, Brigade Road in Bangalore to get free Wi-Fi service by month-end

IT Department waiting for chief minister to launch the project

Bangalore’s commercial hubs of MG Road and Brigade Road are all set to become free wi-fi zones by month-end with the Information Technology Department just waiting for a date from the chief minister’s office for a formal launch of the project.

“The installation of equipment on the two stretches has been completed and so has the testing process. People entering MG Road and Brigade Road can access their e-mails or browse the internet for free using the Wi-Fi service”, IT and BT Department Principal Secretary ISN Prasad told Deccan Herald. 

A private internet service provider (ISP) will render the services, while the bills will be footed by the State.

The idea of providing free Wi-Fi  access on these two busy stretches was mooted by Karnataka Information and Communication Technology Group (KIG -2020) headed by technocrat T V Mohandas Pai in its recommendations to the government earlier this year.

The access protocol has also been finalised. According to Pai, a person with a Wi-Fi  enabled device - a smart phone or tablet - will have to register by providing name and mobile number once he gets into the Wi-Fi zone.

The service provider will send a password. Using the password, internet services can be accessed for two hours from the time of registration. If the person comes out of the zone or completes the two hour access period, re-registration has to be done. Data transfer speed will be up to 256 kbps which is considered as moderate speed.

However, there will be no provision to download or watch videos, Pai noted. 

Pai said KIG felt that the IT capital needed to have a few free Wi-Fi  zones. The panel has also recommended that the areas surrounding Vidhana Soudha, Electronics City and Jayanagar 4th Block also be made free Wi-Fi hubs.

The government plans to extend the project to some select areas in Mysore, Hubli-Dharwad and Mangalore. Recently, the Bangalore Metro Rail Corporation launched free Wi-Fi services on select coaches running between MG Road and Baiyappanahalli.

Source: http://tinyurl.com/k7lp7z6

Dinosaur excavations inundated in China

FLOODING in northeast China has inundated world-renowned dinosaur excavation sites, authorities said today.

A 70-meter-wide breach of an embankment on the Heilong River in Tongjiang City, Heilongjiang Province flooded nearby villages around 8:30 am today, said Wang Bin, a local official.

More than 16,000 residents were evacuated on Monday in anticipation of the flooding, said Wang and there have been no casualties.

The Heilong River has been rising for more than a week. Early yesterday, a 20-meter-wide breach was reported at a section of the river in Luobei County, but there were no casualties, thanks to prompt evacuation.

Four dinosaur excavation sites at the foot of the mountains in Jiayin County, Heilongjiang, have been flooded by water from the Heilong River, Liu Min, director of the Dinosaur National Geology Park's administration center, told Xinhua today.

There are still dinosaur fossils at the sites, which could come loose and be washed away if they are soaked for a long period of time, said a member of the park staff.

The fossils can never be replaced and the losses caused by the flood would be incalculable, said the worker.

In recent years, the county has built dikes near the mountains, but they failed to resist the current flood, said Liu.

The park opened to visitors in 2002 and several hundred fossilized dinosaur skeletons are believed to be still buried underground.

Flooding from the river has also hit the Heilong River Basin Museum on an island in Luobei County.

Water began to enter the museum on August 17 and is now more than one meter deep in some first floor rooms.

More than 2,000 documents from the first floor have been moved to the second floor, said Zhao Yong, curator of the museum.

The water level of the Heilong River in Luobei was 2.01 meters higher than the warning level, surpassing the previous 1984 record by 24 cm.

Source: http://tinyurl.com/ldptqbb

Micromax Teases Canvas Doodle 2, Hints at Imminent Launch

Micromax is apparently gearing up to announce its next Canvas Doodle smartphone soon. The Indian technology firm has released a teaser image of the phone on its official Facebook page.

Rumours about the Canvas Doodle 2 smartphone had surfaced earlier, but this is the first time that Micromax has confirmed the development. The company posted a hand-drawn image with the smartphone model name followed by a tagline that read 'can your imagination get bigger?'
The illustration, however, did not reveal anything about the specifications of the upcoming device. A line which read "Draw, Depict or Doodle and let your thoughts come to life on a bigger Canvas. Canvas Doodle 2 - Coming Soon!" indicated that Micromax has something bigger in store for prospective buyers.

According to reports, Canvas Doodle 2 is due for a launch anytime soon and is likely to fall in the ₹18,000 price range. Regarding its specifications, the smartphone is expected to sport a 5.7-inch screen with 720 pixel resolution and powered by a 1.2GHz quad-core MediaTek MT6589 processor.

Other stipulated features include 1GB RAM, 16GB of expandable internal storage, 12-megapixel rear camera with LED flash, 5-megapixel secondary camera, Android 4.2 Jelly Bean and 2,600mAh battery. The phone may also come with support for vertical panorama in camera app, video pinning to home-screen support, Flip to mute, and Smart Pause.

The device will be pitted against Samsung's Galaxy Mega 5.8, which is priced around ₹23,000.

Canvas Doodle 2 was listed on e-retailer Flipkart  under the moniker Micromax Canvas Doodle 2 A240.There is no mention about the availability of the smartphone on the website.

Source: http://tinyurl.com/mjlk3wj

Latin American leaders love Twitter

Written By Unknown on August 22, 2013 | 11:59:00 AM

When Argentina’s President Cristina Fernandez uses Twitter, controversy often follows. Although tweet discussions range in content and frequency, there is never a lack of debate.
Fernandez, who almost never gives interviews or takes questions from reporters, often uses her official Twitter account, twitter.com/CFKArgentina, which claims more than 2.2 million followers, to engage the people directly.

There was the time when she sent more than 60 tweets in a single day after protests by thousands of Argentines critical of her government. Or the many times she has attacked her political opponents and media outlets, accusing them of twisting the truth and defaming her.

Then, there are lighter tweets: pictures with Pope Francis, a boxing champion and her dogs. Or her recounting of casual conversations with Argentines on the road, the birth of her grandson and even her musings over her favorite TV show. “I’m a fan of the series ‘Games of Thrones.’ I love it,” Fernandez tweeted on April 28. “When the DirecTV people came to see me to announce some investments, I asked them if they could please get me season three. . . . I’m sure that tomorrow someone from the opposition will denounce me for asking and receiving gifts.”

In a major departure from former Cuban leader Fidel Castro’s four-hour speeches, Twitter’s 140 characters or less have become a leading communication tool for presidents throughout Latin America.

An example of this was seen recently when Bolivia’s Evo Morales’ plane was grounded in Vienna amid incorrect suspicions that National Security Agency leader Edward Snowden was on board. The region’s leaders used Twitter to express their disapproval.

“All international immunities that protect heads of state have been violated for the empire’s obsession,” tweeted Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, referring to the United States. Maduro’s account, twitter.com/NicolasMaduro, has nearly 1.3 million followers.

Maduro has used Twitter to argue with former Colombian President Alvaro Uribe and Puerto Rican singer Ricky Martin. He often slams Venezuela’s wealthy and fondly remembers his mentor and predecessor, the late Hugo Chavez.

For many Venezuelans, monitoring Twitter became a must after Chavez joined the social media platform in late April 2010, according to comScore, an internet monitoring site. Chavez’s account still leads the pack of Latin American leaders, with 4 million Twitter followers.

In a politically divided country like Venezuela, being able to influence the social media space is key. Almost one out of four Venezuelans in the country use Twitter regularly.

Venezuelan officials “don’t communicate first by television, radio or a speech, but through Twitter,” said Javier Pereira, the El Nacional newspaper’s website coordinator. “That has caused us to be alert, monitoring constantly.”

Venezuela, along with Brazil and Argentina, ranks among the world’s top 10 in the use of Twitter. Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos said in an interview why he likes platform so much. With 2 million followers, twitter.com/JuanManSantos ranks third for Latin America leaders — dead or alive — after Chavez and Fernandez.

“I use it sometimes to send messages to clarify certain things, to communicate with the country,” said Santos. “You sent out a tweet and immediately, if it’s something important, it comes out in the media. Instead of making so many press conferences, you use Twitter.”

Almost two-thirds of world leaders have joined the Twitterverse, according to an analysis last year of 264 government accounts in 125 countries that the public relations firm Burson-Marsteller described as the first-ever global study of world leaders using the platform.

The most-followed account of any world leader is www.twitter.com/BarackObama, which has more than 35 million followers. But Latin American leaders continue to gain ground a tweet a time. They have become more adept on the social network than their European counterparts and rank among the world’s top 20 most-followed leaders.

Source: http://tinyurl.com/lehtxbc

In A First, Top Iranian Government Official Admits To Being On Facebook

The U.S.-educated Zarif acknowledged on August 14 that he and his family maintain a fan page on Facebook, the social-media site that the Iranian government blocks. "Following the inquiry of [some of you], this page is being updated by me and my children," wrote Zarif, who has more than 65,000 Facebook "fans."
The post was quickly liked by more than 5,000 Facebook users, some of whom couldn't help asking Zarif what antifiltering software he was using to access the site.
"Aren't you the minister of the same establishment that has filtered Facebook? I don't get this constant contradiction between the comments and actions of Iranian officials," wrote one user, who also welcomed Zarif to "the world of Facebook." (Zarif hasn't answered.)
Zarif's public acknowledgement that he was running his own page surprised many, according to Iranian social-media activist Vahid Online, who notes that even Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei's Facebook page "has never publicly acknowledged that the page is maintained by its office."
Online notes that "Zarif is the first senior Iranian official to type with his own fingers and write that he is using Facebook, a site that has been branded as a tool of enemies and mentioned in trials of opposition members."
Popular, And Banned
Facebook is the most popular social-media site in Iran and just one of the thousands of websites the government filters, or blocks access to.
Many Iranians access it via a variety of antifiltering tools. Iranian authorities have warned that being a member of a social-media site is not a crime, but bypassing state filtering can be considered criminal. Some officials, and state-controlled television, have labeled social-media platforms "Zionist tools" of Iran's enemies and foreign intelligence services.
Despite that, many officials, including Khamenei, have a presence on sites like Facebook and Twitter, albeit without claims of personal participation. During the summer's presidential campaign, all the main candidates tweeted, maintained Facebook pages, and posted pictures on Instagram. The social-media accounts were said to be maintained by the candidates' supporters.
Mahmood Enayat, who leads the U.K.-based Small Media Foundation, says Iranian authorities have realized the power of social media. "When the highest authority in the country has a presence on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Tumblr, and other sites, I don't think anyone would object to Zarif and ask him why he has an official Facebook account," Enayat says.
"The other issue is that social media can't be ignored and officials can't dismiss them as Western tools and say that they'll stay away from them. We saw it during the presidential election, when most of the candidates were present on social media."
Signs Of Easing Restrictions?
Zarif, who joined Facebook in February 2009, had previously not updated his page. He began posting and adding new photos a few days before his confirmation hearing for the post of foreign minister in July. His updates were quickly "liked" by tens of thousands of fans.
Many people thanked Zarif for connecting with them through Facebook and said other Iranian officials should follow his lead. Many of the comments on the page made reference to pledges new Iranian President Hassan Rohani has made, including improving international diplomatic ties and forging a moderate path domestically.
One man wrote, "I hope you can remove the sanctions." Another wrote: "I hope the good feeling people have about you won't be destroyed. I hope you read all these messages that are full of hope and demands for change."
Since Rohani's election in June, Iranian media has speculated that the new government might ease some online restrictions. During his campaign, Rohani criticized state Internet censorship, saying that it widened the gap between the people and the state.
One online activist in Tehran who did not want to be named told RFE/RL that Zarif's presence on Facebook had "created lots of hope" that the site might be unblocked.
Enayat isn't as optimistic. "I think the likelihood that the Islamic republic will unblock Facebook is very slim. [If] more political figures and organizations will join Facebook, the [negative attitude] toward Facebook and Twitter will become more and more meaningless," he says.
"But we have to wait and see whether that would lead to the removal of the filtering."

Copyright (c) 2013 RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036. www.rferl.org

Source: http://tinyurl.com/l7kyzzj

Swivel Technology Brings Cher's 'Clueless' Closet To Life (VIDEO)

Written By Unknown on August 21, 2013 | 9:58:00 PM

Cher Horowitz's high-tech virtual closet was one of the best parts of "Clueless." What girl wouldn't want the ability to style outfits on a computer without the pain of trying everything on?

Thankfully, we are getting closer to the day when Cher's fictional closet will be a reality for us all. In the video above, YouTuber iJustine experiments with Swivel, a virtual try-on system from FaceCake that allows you to see yourself "wearing" clothing, accessories and even makeup on a screen.

The clothes and accessories even move on the screen as you move (hence the name "swivel").

For now, the software is intended for use in stores, meaning it replaces the traditional dressing room experience with an augmented reality one. But we bet it won't be long until Swivel infiltrates our homes and gives us the "Clueless" closets we've been dreaming of since 1995.

Source: http://tinyurl.com/kwp7wnt

This $3,300 Wooden Bike Will Set Your Cash on Fire

They say you write what you know. Sometimes, that holds true for design, too. Thierry Boltz and Claude Saos are industrial designers, sure, but they’re also helpless, all-consumed bike nuts, and when they set out to build a two-wheeler of their own, they had one main aim: to make something that they’d personally love to ride. What they ended up with is the WOOD.b, a bike which combines a handsome wooden frame with standard steel components. Basically, this is the bike that will make the guy who thought he had the nicest bike on the block do a double take and crash into a trash can.

Boltz and Saos hail from Strasbourg, a French town with a unique city center that deliberately filters out cars to make room for pedestrians and bikers. In other words, the region’s love of bicycles doesn’t just shape its citizens’ habits–it dictates urban planning, too. After founding BSG Bikes last year, the designers were set on making a bike using the materials they loved: wood, steel, leather. But they also wanted to do something different from what was already out there.



The main challenge, Saos explains, was coming up with a system that safely and effectively joined the wood frame and the steel parts. They wanted to give owners the chance to use standard components, and to let them seek repairs at their local bike shops when needed–something, Saos says, that “is not the case for most wooden bikes.” The final look was inspired by Scandinavian furniture and Italian cars from the ’30s and ’40s. “I think that WOOD.b reflects both of these influences well,” Saos says–a fine ID humblebrag.

When available next month, each WOOD.b will be custom-made for its owner. You’ll be able to pick from over a half dozen types of wood for the frame, including ash, beech, mahogany and rosewood, and from a selection of 18 different colors for the steel bits. Alas, the good looks don’t come cheap. The kit that includes the frame, the seat post, the stem and headrest starts at 2,500 euros, or around $3,300.

About the price, the designers point out that some people can’t resist splurging on beautiful car. For them, it’s the same thing, just with two wheels and a handlebar. And while the appeal of the WOOD.b might have to do with its “incredible vintage look,” in Saos’s words, or “the feeling of riding and incredible object,” it also has to do, he says, with the simple fact that you’ve “never seen another bike like this one.”

Source: http://tinyurl.com/mgufekj

Samsung, LG, Apple to compete in smart watches

Samsung Electronics, Apple Inc. and LG Electronics, the world‘s top three electronics firms, are rumored to be taking their competition to the next level this fall in the emerging smart-watch market.

Each company is ready to release a smart watch ― Samsung with Galaxy Gear, Apple with iWatch and LG with GWatch ― most likely by the end of this year.

Samsung is to release Galaxy Gear at the upcoming IFA trade show during its “Unpacked Episode 2” event, along with LG, which is packing more ammunition on top of its well-received G2 and the G Pad, the new tablet it will unveil at the show.

But industry experts believe the watches themselves are unlikely to tout any unique functions, at most offering a Bluetooth connection to the user’s main device.

For this purpose, Samsung will unveil Galaxy Gear as a bundle with its phablet Note 3, according to industry watchers. Previously, LG Electronics had sold the Prada phone in a bundle with a watch.

Galaxy Gear will feature a dual-core Exynos processor, 1 GB RAM, a 1.67-inch, 320x320 resolution display, a 2-megapixel camera, and Bluetooth and NFC connectivity.

However, rumors have floated that the watch may leave out some important features such as phone and flexible display. U.S. technology media outlet The Verge reported Tuesday that the watch would not work as a phone.

Many industry observers also do not believe the phone will be flexible, mostly because other key components ― including the display, battery and memory chip ― are not advanced enough to support such a device.

“It may take some time for the smart watch to become advanced. Still, Samsung is seeking to occupy the market as the company has always been a follower of Apple in mobile technologies. Samsung wants to be ahead of the rival in wearable and TV products,” said Kim Hyun-yong, a researcher at E-Trade Korea, a Seoul-based securities firm.

“It will also take some time for Apple’s iWatch to come out. It won’t be (released) this year,” Kim added.

Apple has long been rumored to be working on introducing an “iWatch.” It is said that the company had a team of 100 people working on a watch-like device, and has applied for the iWatch trademark in the United States.

Recently, Apple hired Nike product consultant Jay Blahnik reportedly to lead the iWatch team.

According to the rumors, the iWatch is likely to adopt a flexible display and work as an extended peripheral of iOS devices. For instance, it will reportedly be able to check messages and emails, and load fitness monitoring technologies.

LG Electronics, meanwhile, initiated the development early this year, undergoing tests with other arms of the group such as LG Display and LG Chem. Last month, LG sought eight trademarks, for the “G Watch,” “G Glass” and “Watch G,” among other names including the G Pad.

Some sources said although it is gearing up for the launch of the smart watch, LG is unlikely to unveil it this year.

LG already has some expertise in the likes of smart watches. In 2008, the company unveiled the LG Prada Link, a Bluetooth-enabled digital watch that can monitor its Prada phone calls as well as read SMS text messages. The following year, the company showed off its 3G watch phone LG-GD910 in Europe, enabled with a touch screen and video-calling capability.

By Kim Ji-hyun and Shin Ji-hye

Source: http://tinyurl.com/kto962e

Social network app nabs Metro smoker

A SOCIAL media app helped nab a recalcitrant smoker on the Metro this morning.
The man was seen smoking in a Metro Line 9 subway car heading towards southwestern Songjiang District around 10:30am, police said. He refused to extinguish the cigarette in spite of complaints from other passengers, before one of them took his picture and reported the case to Shanghai Metro police via WeChat, a social networking service.
Metro police confirmed around 1:30pm that they found the smoker and the case was under investigation.

Source: http://tinyurl.com/lpnfz9p

Mars One Project: Over 1,800 Indians Apply for One-Way Trip to Red Planet

Mars One, a non-profit organisation, is working to establish a human colony on Mars by 2023. More than 1,800 Indians have already applied for the one-way trip to the Red planet, Aashima Dogra, spokesperson of the Netherlands-based Mars One, told The Times of India.

Dogra also revealed that out of 1,800 applicants, several people hail from Bangalore.

"This program is proving to be extremely popular among Indians," Dogra said adding, "The number of Indians who've applied has increased from 6 in May to 1,800 in the last three months."

For the mission more than 100,000 people have applied from across the world. Out of the thousands of people who have signed up for the project, only 40 will be shortlisted and from that the NGO will select four people - two men and two women, for the final trip.

The four people will leave for the Red planet in September 2022 and are expected to land in April 2023.

The mission is headed by Bas Lansdorp, CEO and co-founder of Mars One. The organisation aims to fund the project by broadcasting every aspect of the mission starting from launch to landing and living on the Red planet.

"What we want to do is tell the story to the world. When humans go to Mars, when they settle on Mars and build a new Earth, a new planet. This is one of the most exciting things that ever happened, and we want to share the story with the entire world," Lansdorp told CNN.

The mission is open to anyone who is above 18 and the applicant needs to pay a fee of $7 (approximately 449 INR). The number of Indians who wants to move to Mars is surging.

On 6 May, the official website showed that only five Indians have applied for the project. The number has now increased to 1,800 in the past three months, Dogra said.

"This programme is proving to be extremely popular among Indians, I think because of the excellent space programme we have," she told TOI.

Source: http://tinyurl.com/k6xqdkj

Google Wants Your Location Data To Go Public--Here's Why

Where are you standing or sitting right now--do you know exactly? Your smartphone does, down to a meter or two, even if it's snuggled in the depths of a bag or stuck way down in a jeans pocket. And soon, it may be broadcasting that location in all sorts of publicly viewable places.

And soon enough you're going to be okay with that. Gotten over your NSA-snooping fears yet?

Google's Waze integration today is proof positive that user location data is going to become more public quicker than you may think. Essentially Waze relies on crowdsourced data to refine its maps and to report in real time on traffic events like accidents or jams. If Google's building Waze data into its maps service like this, you can bet your bottom dollar it's going to be persuading as many Google users as it can to either volunteer this sort of data personally, or to passively imply it (via their smartphone location feeds). With enough users taking part in this sort of crowdsourcing effort, real-time traffic alerts and other tricks in Google Maps are going to be self-evidently more useful. So there's a real benefit here for people who opt in, and that'll prompt many more folks to take part--which means voluntarily giving Google data on your real-time location, albeit maybe anonymously.

Google's own John Hanke has also hit the news today with a Google-related location service. In a piece at the Washington Post, Hanke is busy talking up Field Trip, Google's highly location-aware service that will prompt users with an alert "when there’s a point of interest nearby, such as a historic statue or a restaurant that got a good review from a local blog." For this to work, if you think about it, a user has to be permanently sharing their location with Google's various services: It's just going to be useless without this system. As Hanke sees it, Google helped teach smartphone users to work out where they were and, as the post puts it, "Google Maps trained us to follow directions. Now its former developer wants us to explore." He says Field Trip doesn't store that data, but instead tallies up when users trigger one of the Field Trip alerts--so it's merely keeping track of where people are setting its alerts off in real time.

Separately Apple's next-gen iPhone operating system is coming up, and iOS 7 has a surprising little secret built right into it: Deep inside the privacy settings is a section labeled "Frequent locations." The settings page alerts iPhone users that you can flip a switch to "allow your iPhone to learn places you frequently visit in order to provide useful location-related information." You can also flip a switch to allow Apple to "use your frequent location information information to improve Maps." Beneath that is a short list of places you've been recently and frequently, and you can even see these on a map.

The revelation about iOS 7 has already stirred up some fuss online, but this overlooks the fact users can simply throw the digital switches on the page and prevent Apple from doing this location-sensing. And once you get over this, it's easy to see that Apple really does have a lot of location-based services planned for its iDevices, perhaps as a smarter shopping service than its own Apple-specific and location-aware Store app. Apple is busy building its own Maps app to rival Google after a prolonged spat, and it's evidently hoping that it can use user data instead of sending out an expensive fleet of tracking cars to drive the world's roads.

And lest you think all this is nonsense, and the average smartphone user wouldn't feel comfortable sharing their real-time location data with a company like Google or Apple for fear of the NSA snooping over their shoulder, it turns out that consumers are pretty happy to do so...as long as there's a reward. A fresh study by Placecast asked 2,000 consumers if--assuming they gave permission--they'd be interested in getting smartphone alerts about new products or sales or restaurants on their device. 45% said they were "somewhat" interested, which is a dramatic upswing from 2009's 26%. Asked if such location alerts would be useful to them, over 75% said they'd be useful, and more relevant than other coupon-based promotions. 87% said location-aware ads would make them aware of locations they'd previously not visited.

That means that for shopping at least consumers would be happy to tell a name like Google or Apple their location...which may also imply they're happy to share more personal preference data in order to receive precisely tailored coupons. And this practice is already underway via the app Foursquare, which was recently revealed to have sold location data to third parties in order to enable location-aware advertisements outside the confines of the Foursquare app.

What does this mean for developers? You need to get savvy quickly on the privacy requirements and permissions needed for you to collect users' location data. And you could probably profit from quickly devising ways to reward users for sharing their location, rather than simply grabbing it from their phones.

Source: http://tinyurl.com/l5btdts
 
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