Thursday 10 March 2011

Bangladesh desperate to revive World Cup fortunes

This World Cup began in Bangladesh. No, not because it hosted the inauguration ceremony, but because when India seemed unexcited and cool about the World Cup, the anticipation began in earnestness here. The whole week leading to the event was one incredible party on the streets of Dhaka. That excitement, however, hasn't carried onto the field for their side. They are now a side looking for some excitement, for some action.

England, on the other hand, have kept the World Cup alive, or at least the league stages of it. They have brought the excitement into what promised to be a boring month of travel all over the subcontinent, with not much to determine. They have been the biggest endorsement for the Associates, who are on the hit list of the ICC and the sponsors. They, however, are looking for a little less thrill and a lot more passive action.

"It's been great to be involved in some thrilling games," their captain, Andrew Strauss, said on the eve of their game against Bangladesh. "Personally I would have liked them to be a bit easier. I'd probably have a bit more hair on my head at this stage of the tournament. But we have shown a lot of character in a couple of those games certainly, and we want these last two games to be less close, to be honest."

They haven't quite been that fortunate on that count in the lead-up to the game: in four days, they have lost Kevin Pietersen and Stuart Broad to injuries. Surely they won't mind even scraping through to the next round, no matter how comprehensively or scratchily they do it. After that it is just a matter of having three good nights.

"We have been inconsistent in the tournament so far," Strauss said. "We have had two very good games against India and South Africa, two less good ones, against Ireland and Netherlands. We really want to firstly make sure we qualify for the quarter-finals, which means we have to win this game. And secondly, we need to get some consistency into our game. We have got this game, and one against the West Indies in order to do that. It's important that we do do that, and play good solid cricket with both bat and ball."

The loss of Pietersen and Broad is huge, but like any modern side knows, it is the reality of playing modern cricket with modern schedules. "It's not ideal by any means," Strauss said. "We have had to deal with this over the winter. We are very fortunate we have got two ready-made replacements there. In Eoin Morgan, whose finger has recovered just in time, thankfully. And Chris Tremlett, who bowls very similarly to Stuart Broad, and who has been with us, and is used to the conditions. It could have been worse, I suppose, in some ways. Those guys need to come in and hit the ground running, that's important."

Bangladesh have had issues of the other kind to deal with. It has been a mix of their playing worse than they can, and also the crowds expecting too much. For, when you look at it, they have lost to India and West Indies which, provided both sides are at full strength, they are expected to more often than not. They always knew they would need two upsets, or if they are lucky, just one, to make it to the next round. They still have an opportunity to do that. The end of the world has not yet arrived, but it's the way they crumbled against West Indies last week that made their fans lose it.

Shakib Al Hasan has had to bear the brunt of the people and the former players, but he says he is happy to have deflected all the negative attention onto just himself. "It's difficult to describe," Shakib said of the crowd reaction. "Some days when you play well, they will cheer for you. When you don't play well, they will abuse you. We are not thinking about our crowd. We have to just do our stuff. We know what we can do, and we have to do those things."

However, Shakib didn't seek to hide the pressure the side is under, going into what should be a now-or-never game given their poor net run-rate. "Boys will be a bit tense, but we know if we play our best cricket, we can beat any side. They are confident enough to do the right things. We have the belief in ourselves that if we play our best game we can beat any side in the world, in our home conditions, especially."

Reverse swing can do the damage in baking Nagpur: Morkel

Nagpur, March 10 (IANS) The moment you land in Nagpur you feel the heat, literally. Out in the middle, too, it is expected to be as feisty with two World Cup favourites India and South Africa locking horns Saturday.

It is the second week of March and the temperatures in the city are hovering around 37-38 degrees celsius. The afternoon sun is beating down hard on the 22-yard strip and the square. The soaring temperature can be felt with every passing hour of the day. South Africa have been sweating it out in the midday heat for the last two days. They flew down straight from Chennai after their defeat by England on a rank turner.

England not only troubled South Africa with spin, but also with their medium-pacers' reverse swing, a dimension of the game typical to the sub-continent weather. James Anderson and Stuart Broad got the ball to reverse swing in Chennai.

Here too the ball can wobble the other way after losing its shine.

'The wickets we have played on so far have turned. It's basically a reverse role now and we try to support spinners as much as we can,' said South Africa's pace bowler Morne Morkel.

'Reverse swing will be the key and quicker we get that going, the better it is for us,' he said.

The wicket though is a belter and has lots of runs. The Netherlands gave England a scare in the high-scoring first match here.

'It is going to be as good an ODI strip as we have seen in the earlier matches,' says curator Praveen Hinganikar.

A different aspect of the heat could be the fatigue. The visitors say they are used to playing in such conditions and the heat will not tire them out. 'Durban is similar to these conditions. I don't think any of our guys are scared to sweat,' said Morkel.

Cricket-India's TV-free village gets big-screen World Cup treat

The 21st century finally caught up with the village of Taiyan in Indian Kashmir this week.

It took the Cricket World Cup to do it.

On Wednesday, the Indian army set up a huge screen to show 300 villagers from Taiyan the national team's five-wicket win over Netherlands.

Until now, the 2,500 people of Taiyan have not seen a television in the village. You need electricity to make them work and they have not got that either.

They watched in wonder and cheered every boundary hit by Sachin Tendulkar and Virender Sehwag from hundreds of kilometres away in New Delhi.

The army had also arranged for India's matches against Bangladesh and Ireland to be shown on the big screen but most did not bother viewing because of poor weather.

For many of Wednesday's audience, who live perilously close to the tense Line of Control (LOC) with Pakistan, it was the first time they had seen India's revered cricketers in action.

"Let alone television sets, there is no electricity in the village and there is no way that the villagers manage to see a match," Ganesh Natrajan, an Indian army official, told Reuters Television.

"So the Army has planned that all the matches in which India is playing, we should screen them through a laser projector, so that women, children and old people can all come here.

"They are enjoying the matches as they have never seen anything similar before. They did not have much knowledge about cricket but with the help of World Cup they now have knowledge about cricket."

Yaqoob Mohammad, a middle-aged farmer, agreed.

"I would only like to say that before this, we had never seen matches. Our children and women are also seeing the matches," said Yaqoob.

"There are almost 300 people here that are able to see the matches. And we only pray that India wins."

Not surprisingly, India beat Netherlands, who are not a test-playing nation.

Next will be South Africa on Saturday, in distant Nagpur.

Yaqoob and his friends will be back for front row seats. Weather permitting.

Dilshan, Tharanga take Sri Lanka to 327

Eclipsing a record more than a decade old, Upul Tharanga and Thillakaratne Dilshan piled up 282 for the first wicket, as Sri Lanka added to Zimbabwe’s misery after it was put into bat in an ICC world cup group ‘A’ encounter here on Thursday. Both batsmen scored centuries in contrasting styles, setting a new record in world cup cricket. The first-wicket partnership of 282 runs helped Sri Lanka to reach 327/6 in 50 overs.

Dilshan compiled his first century (95 balls) in a world cup game here. Much later, Tharanga joined him in that club, making a well-deserved century in 122 balls.

Saeed Anwar and Wajahatullah Wasti shared a 194 run partnership in the 1999 world cup semi-final at Manchester. That record held for two full world cups before falling apart in Pallekele on a hot, sunny day.

Contrasting hundreds

In the 1999 match, Saeed Anwar made a century (113), but Wasti was out six runs short. No such problems here. Both batsmen went past the three-figure mark in contrasting styles: Angry Dilshan pulling, cutting, clearing infield repeatedly and heaving; while Sober Tharanga, waited for the bad balls. Otherwise, he tapped the ball around and was happy to give the strike to Dilshan.

But after the century, Tharanga took over the mantle, and Dilshan slowed down a bit. In the next 11 balls, Tharanga scored 26, despite some of his excellent textbook strokes going straight to fielders. No ugly strokes making room on the leg side to pacemen, the left-hander stood motionless till the ball was delivered and then decided where to place it. He was 129 and Dilshan, who had taken a nap at 131, suddenly woke up and re-joined the party.

When proceedings began, Zimbabwe paceman Chris Mpofu trapped Upul Tharanga in front in the first ball, but the umpire did not think so. Television replays showed the ball was pitched in line and was hitting stumps, but it was an on-field call. In any case, Zimbabwe did not ask for a review. There was no looking back after that.

Dilshan believes every ball has to be hit. Tinashe Panyangara discovered this at his expense, conceding 19 in his first over. Sharing the new ball from the other end, with a fine-leg and a deep point and two slips, his medium pace coming on to the bat was just what Dilshan had ordered. The first two balls went for 10. Then, one of the two slips was moved out and the deep fine leg moved to deep square leg. After the next two fours, the remaining slip was also removed. The next two balls were eventless. Dilshan crossed over and waited for Mpofu. This time, the crafty Mpofu varied pace and length. Still nine runs came off the over.

After 5 overs Sri Lanka were 41 for no loss. The 50, the fastest in any match in the tournament in Sri Lanka in this edition, came in 6.3 overs. Ray Price’s left arm spin, introduced in the fifth over, helped reduce the run rate a wee bit. He even bowled a maiden as the famed Zimbabwean fielding lifted the team. Dilshan too opted for the safe route against Ray Price and repeatedly tapped 5 balls back – when on 49 – before running the elusive single off the last ball. The 100 runs – the best partnership for Sri Lanka for the first wicket in the tournament – came in 16.1 overs.

From then on, the pair kept on going as the even bounce in the pitch held no threat. Nor did the Zimbabwean bowlers, who did not manage to take a single wicket in their encounter with New Zealand. Both Tharanga and Dilshan fell to tired-looking shots, balls ballooning into simple catches. When Tharanga fell, he and Dilshan fell four shot of equalling the Sri Lankan record for partnerships for any wicket – Tharanga and Sanath Jayasurya had scored 286 for the first wicket at Leeds (vs England) in 2006.

After the openers departed the runs came in a trickle and the Sri Lankan 300 came at the end of over 47. A flurry of wickets at the death left Sri Lanka at a much lower total that what the initial explosive partnership promised. Mpofu benefitted form the acceleration quest and picked up three wickets in the 48th over.

Earlier, Zimbabwe won the toss and elected to field considering the grip problems that the dew factor brings in for the team fielding second.

McLaren chief Whitmarsh plays down fears over lack of pace after Hamilton and Button outbursts

McLaren team principal Martin Whitmarsh is convinced his team is heading in the right direction despite their troubled pre-season.
Jenson Button and Lewis Hamilton have this week both voiced their concerns that the new car is lacking pace and reliability.
Hamilton also made clear that at the moment the MP4-26 is not a car capable of winning the world championship.
Slow start: McLaren have struggled with pace and reliability in pre-season testing so far
Slow start: McLaren have struggled with pace and reliability in pre-season testing
However, McLaren are renowned for their competitiveness and refusal to give in, evident in 2009 when they started the season abysmally, only for Hamilton to win two races come the conclusion.
As far as Whitmarsh is concerned, he is naturally optimistic any wrongs now will be righted, in particular the reliability niggles.
'For this year it's simply too early to say anything definitive about the MP4-26, or indeed about any other 2011 Formula One car,' said Whitmarsh. 'Suffice to say we've had a few reliability issues during testing so far, but we're confident things are going in the right direction now.'
Concerned: Lewis HamiltonOutspoken: Jenson Button 

The decision to launch later than their rivals, instead using the first test to evaluate the new Pirelli tyres for this season, has been criticised by many.
Whitmarsh is adamant the data gathered from that test in Valencia was invaluable, and that the team 'still stand by our decision to defer its (the car's) introduction by one test.'
Determined to remain upbeat and offer a positive outlook, Whitmarsh told formula1.com, 'Let's just wait and see how the season unfolds. I'm sure there'll be plenty of surprises in store, and to be frank it'll be good for the sport if there are.'

Wednesday 9 March 2011

Google unveils Google APIs Explorer

ONLINE ADVERTISING BROKER Google has made it easier for developers to access its application programming interfaces (APIs) by releasing the Google APIs Explorer.

Google has created a single website where developers can see how to use its various APIs to integrate them into their applications. The firm offers developers the ability to access its various services such as Shopping, Translate and Buzz through the use of its APIs.

Developers can execute example API calls and see debugging information, giving them valuable information that should save time in implementation.

Not all of Google's APIs are currently listed in the APIs Explorer, with the most notable exception being its Maps API.

By default Google has disabled access to private data, though developers who want to test out APIs that require access to such data can do so by manually asking the APIs Explorer to switch to private access.

Google's goal is to let more developers use its services, which in turn will help it generate more cash from advertising. Its APIs Explorer is just a way of making it easier to use Google's services within third party applications.

Nokia E7 pre-orders begin in India

Users across the Indian realm may sound pleased with this piece of information. Nokia has announced that its remarkable E7 business smartphone is now up for pre-order in India. Users can log onto the official Nokia website and fill in an online form, as well as the preference of their nearest Nokia Priority store.

The selected store will contact the registered users within 24 hours and provide additional information about the handset and deal. Individuals can secure this coveted device by depositing a booking amount of Rs. 3,000 at the store. Fitted with a 4-inch ClearBlack display and a full QWERTY keyboard, the phone houses an 8 megapixel camera with dual LED flash.

“Nokia E7 is the new age Communicator that is set to redefine the smartphone expectations by offering superior ‘mobile office’ solutions. Nokia E7 offers all that a business smartphone consumer is seeking from his device – it has the convenience of using a touch or type on a large 4 inch screen with a 4 line QWERTY keypad. It offers seamless connectivity, ease of use, excellent multimedia performance and a host of productivity applications. We are confident that with the Nokia E7 we will expand the smartphone market in India,” commented D. Shivakumar, Vice President and Managing Director, Nokia India.

In addition, the company will enable users to experience the E7 at Nokia Priority stores beginning March 8, 2011 in few cities and towns across India. The smartphone comes dressed in attractive shades of dark grey and silver white. Nokia has also started its Nokia E7 SmartLife Bloggers Tour over the next one week. Users can log onto apps. facebook.com/smartlifewithnokia/ to guess the cues related to the device. Further, three lucky winners can snap up the Nokia E7.

The Nokia E7 is now available for pre-order in India.

JP Morgan: Apple's iPad 2 could cause 'bubble burst' for rival tablets

According to one Wall Street analyst, Apple's soon-to-be-released iPad 2 could burst a bubble for competitors who are hoping to capitalize on the growing tablet market but remain unable to catch up.

Analyst Mark Moskowitz of J.P. Morgan Research warned investors early Wednesday that build plans for tablet shipments from Apple's rivals may be too high, presenting "increasing risk of a bubble burst" in the second half of 2011.

"In our view, the technical and form factor improvements of the iPad 2 stand to make it tougher for the first generation of competitive offerings to play catch-up, meaning actual shipments could fall well short of plan," Moskowitz wrote.

Using discounted build plan estimates to project tablet shipments for the year, the analyst claims that tablet makers will build approximately 65.1 million tablets in 2011. When compared against J.P. Morgan's estimates of 47.9 million tablets sold this year, companies could find themselves with as much as 51 percent oversupply in a worst case scenario.

Apple is expected to maintain the lion's share of the tablet market. Moskowitz estimates that Apple could see nearly 100 percent sales growth year over year, resulting in more than 29 million iPads sold worldwide in 2011.

According to Moskowitz, component suppliers could stand the most to lose from a bubble burst. "Based on our research inputs, tablet makers eager to emulate Apple’s meteoric start are trying to secure components with inflated build plans," Moskowitz noted. "Of note, glass displays, processors, and, to a lesser extent, NAND Flash are the components that could be most at risk."

Moskowitz has a "favorable view of Apple's products and operating model," but acknowledges that "Apple is not for everyone." However, holdouts hoping for an alternative to Apple's iPad may be "underwhelmed" by rival offerings.

"Aside from Motorola’s Xoom and HP’s TouchPad (which does not have a price tag yet), the competitive offerings appear to be light on attraction, in our view," said Moskowitz.

J.P. Morgan maintains an Overweight rating on Apple with a price target of $450.

Initial Wall Street response to the unveiling of the iPad 2 last week has been favorable. In general, analysts were impressed by what were seen as "evolutionary" upgrades to the device and the thinner and lighter form factor. At the time, Moskowitz admitted that his firm's forecast of Apple holding 68 percent market share in 2011 "may be conservative" in light of the iPad 2.

Economies prosper when women given equal opportunity: Obama

WASHINGTON: History shows that when women and girls have access to opportunity, societies are more just, economies are more likely to prosper and governments are more likely to serve the needs of all their people, US President Barack Obama has said on the occasion of 100th anniversary of International Women's Day.

"That is why my administration has stood up for gender equality and women's empowerment around the world and demanded an end to sexual and gender-based violence," Obama said.

"It's why we're developing a plan to promote women's meaningful participation in conflict prevention and resolution in war torn societies. And it's why we are working to advance these goals and our national interests by strengthening the role of women in every aspect of our foreign policy," he said.

"In the US and around the world, we will not rest until our mothers, sisters and daughters assume their rightful place as full and equal members of a secure, prosperous and just world," Obama said.

On the International Women's Day, the world celebrates the extraordinary gains made by women over the past century and the women pioneers who made them possible and we reaffirm our unwavering support for the rights, security, dignity and opportunity of all women around the world.

"Today reminds us that across countries and cultures, people everywhere, women and men, share rights and aspirations that are universal, among them the freedom to chart their own destiny, to raise their children free from violence and to live in societies that value their voice and respect their will," Obama said.

Suicide bombing kills 34 in Peshawar funeral

Islamabad, March 9 (IANS) At least 34 mourners were killed and 42 injured Wednesday in a suicide attack at a funeral near Pakistan's Peshawar city, media reports said.

The blast occurred in Adezai area of Peshawar city, the capital of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province bordering Afghanistan, Geo News reported.

About 150 people were attending the funeral of the wife of a pro-government tribal leader when the explosion took place in Adezai area, around 20 km southeast of Peshawar, DPA said.

Adezai is a village where a militia group called Aman Lashkar is supporting the government in the fight against the Taliban, the report said.

'It was a suicide attack,' said Siraj Ahmad, a senior government official in Peshawar. 'Thirty-four people are dead and 42 injured.'

A witness told Geo television that the lone suicide bomber was about 35 to 40 years of age and he shouted 'God is great' before detonating the explosives.

Another witness said the blast threw him to the ground. 'When I got up I saw there were bodies lying everywhere.'

The suicide attack came a day after a car bomb near the office of the military's Inter-Services Intelligence agency killed 26 people and injured 131 in Faisalabad, a key industrial city in Punjab province.

The Taliban took responsibility for the Tuesday's bombing.

Nasim Sadiq, the top government official in Faisalabad, said Wednesday that around 200 kg of explosives were detonated by remote control.

'They had parked the vehicle near the compressor of a CNG (compressed natural gas) station and wanted to blow up the compressor,' Sadiq was quoted as saying.

Gadhafi Says Foreign Elements Responsible for Libya Uprising

Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi is repeating his claim that foreign operatives are responsible for the uprising against his government.

Addressing a group of people from the town of Zentan, Gadhafi blamed outside elements from Afghanistan, Algeria, Egypt and the Palestinian territories for the rebellion. The remarks were broadcast on state television Wednesday.

Troops loyal to Gadhafi attacked the rebel-held city of Zawiya for a fifth day Tuesday, part of renewed assaults aimed at reclaiming ground lost to rebel forces. Eyewitnesses said the city, 50 kilometers west of the capital, came under heavy mortar fire.

Rebel officials in the city said dozens of people have been killed in the assault and hundreds wounded, including women and children.

The various reports could not be independently confirmed because electricity, phone and Internet services in Zawiya have all been cut.

To the east, much of which is under opposition control, Libyan warplanes carried out several airstrikes on anti-government positions around the key oil port of Ras Lanuf. The city was bombed heavily as pro-Gadhafi forces targeted the town's water reservoir among other installations. But as of late Tuesday, rebel officials said they still controlled the area.

Anti-government forces are seeking to recapture the city of Bin Jawad, 160 kilometers east of Gadhafi’s hometown of Sirte, after pulling out in the face of reinforced government troops.

Opposition leaders based in the eastern city of Benghazi initially suggested they made an amnesty offer to Gadhafi, but later denied any back-channel negotiations were under way. A spokesman for the rebel National Libyan Council, Abdul Hafidh Ghoga, said the group is not prepared to negotiate.

Ghoga called again for foreign powers to impose a no-fly zone over Libya and effectively ground Gadhafi's air force.

Rebel representatives said they have had contacts with some foreign governments, and have sent envoys to several European cities seeking support. An Italian diplomatic delegation was in Benghazi Tuesday meeting with opposition leaders. It was the first official public visit by Western diplomats since the establishment of the provisional rebel government.

But activists say the Benghazi council's authority remains tentative and has yet to unite with disparate, divided opposition groups abroad.

A council official told European officials Monday that Gadhafi is relying on his air force because he lacks adequate ground troops to put down the uprising. Mahmoud Jebril said the Libyan leader relies largely on security brigades led by his sons and loyal officers.

EC ban on rice scheme unjustified: Kerala CM

Thiruvananthapuram: Kerala Chief Minister VS Achuthanandan on Wednesday termed as ‘unjustified’ the Election Commission's directive banning the implementation of the state government scheme to provide rice at Rs 2 per kg to 40 lakh families.

Addressing reporters here, Achuthanandan said he had already written to the Election Commission registering the state government's protest against the directive.

He said the decision to extend the scheme to APL families was taken at the Cabinet meeting on February 23 and the government order in this regard came out on February 25.

"There is no justification in arguing that the code of conduct for Assembly poll which came into effect on March 1 is applicable to the Cabinet decision," he said.

After the announcement of polls in five states, Union Railway Minister Mamata Banerjee had yesterday announced in Parliament that girl students would be given free passes in trains, he said, and wondered wither the code of conduct was not applicable to the Centre.

The Chief Minister alleged that the pressure from a major political party in the state was behind the EC decision to deprive rice at Rs 2 per kg to poor families.

To a question on CPI-M delaying the decision on whether to field him again to lead the LDF in the coming Assembly polls, Achuthanandan said, "I hope those concerned will come out with a clear stand on the matter."

Meeting with PM on Lokpal bill 'bad': Anna Hazare

Commenting further on the meeting with the Prime Minister Hazare said, "We want joint committee of citizens and ministers for formulation of a strong Lokpal bill."

He said that agitation against corruption would be intensified.

The eminent social activist had threatened to go on an indefinite fast from April 5 if the Prime Minister does not initiate action for formulation of a strong Lokpal bill, or anti-graft legislation, in consultation with the civil society by March end.

"I have written to the Prime Minister, if he doesn't takes a decision on drafting a strong Lokpal bill by March-end, I will go on an indefinite fast from April 5," Hazare had said on March 26.

Hazare, in his letter to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, has demanded that the government immediately set up a committee with at least half of its member being from the civil society.

Samajwadi MP Akhilesh Yadav arrested, calls Maya autocratic

Samajwadi Party MP Akhilesh Yadav, the son of party chief Mulayam Singh Yadav, was arrested from the airport in Lucknow on Wednesday to prevent him from taking part in protests against Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Mayawati and her party. "The state government has been functioning in an autocratic manner and my arrest reflects it clearly," Akhilesh Yadav told reporters before being whisked away by police.

Akhilesh Yadav, who is president of the party's Uttar Pradesh unit, was held at Amausi airport shortly after he arrived from Delhi.

"We will continue our fight against the autocratic functioning of the state government, irrespective of the harsh measures being adopted by the state government to gag us," he added.

According to Deputy Inspector General, Lucknow, DK Thakur, he was arrested to maintain law and order in the wake of the SP's protests against Uttar Pradesh's ruling Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP).

He was supposed to address party men first at the SP's office in Lucknow and later in Kannauj, his parliamentary constituency, said party spokesperson in the state Rajendra Chaudhary.

SP launched a three-day statewide agitation against the state's ruling party on March 7 as part of its campaign "BSP hatao, Pradesh Bachao (Remove BSP, save the state)".

Tuesday 8 March 2011

Samajwadi Party protests against Mayawati regime

Lucknow, March 8 (IANS) Continuing its protests against Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Mayawati, hundreds of Samajwadi Party activists took to the streets and clashed with police in various parts of the state Tuesday.

The demonstrators also blocked traffic and disrupted work in government offices.

Tuesday is the second day of the Samajwadi Party's three-day campaign targeted at Mayawati's Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) government.

Several Samajwadi leaders, including Azam Khan, were detained in Rampur district. A large number of party activists were attacked with batons by police in Basti district.

Shouting anti-government slogans, the activists barged into government offices in Gorakhpur district. In the same district, they also blocked a train.

'We will continue with our campaign irrespective of the harsh measures adopted by the Mayawati government against us,' party spokesman Rajendra Chaudhary told reporters here.

According to reports, Varanasi, Allahabad, Kanpur and several other major cities too witnessed similar demonstrations.

Monday 7 March 2011

The iPad's biggest competitor hasn't been invented yet

Steve Jobs had some strong words for Apple’s competitors as he launched the iPad 2 in San Francisco earlier this week. Apple’s chief executive said that the original iPad, released less than a year ago, had left the competition “flummoxed”. “They went back to the drawing boards,” he said. “They tore up their designs because they weren’t competitive.”

What might sound like hubris to those who are unconvinced by the fervour that sounds any new Apple product is largely supported by the facts. By the end of 2010, Apple had sold 15 million iPads. The company estimates its share of the market at 90 per cent or more. The most pessimistic view of Apple’s place in the tablet market right now suggests that its share may have fallen as low as 75 per cent in the last quarter of 2010. Overall, though, the tablet market remains Apple’s.

The competition is growing, however. Motorola’s Xoom tablet, released in the US last month and due in Britain some time next month, has had generally positive reviews; there are high hopes for the BlackBerry PlayBook tablet, which is expected next month; and Samsung is about to release the second version of its Galaxy Tab, the first version of which was greeted enthusiastically by technology writers but, by the company’s own estimation, failed to sell in significant numbers.

But as many competitors are readying their first tablet computers, Apple has now announced its second. The iPad 2 is lighter and thinner than its predecessor, is powered by a faster processor and has front and back cameras for video conferencing. Crucially, though, it can take advantage of an existing ecosystem: a new version of Apple’s iOS operating system and around 65,000 iPad-specific apps.

Who can take it on? "None of the ones that we’ve heard from so far," says Sarah Rotman Epps, of analysts Forrester. She says the tablets we’ve seen so far and the ones that are about to be released are "solid products with fatally flawed product strategies".

Speaking at the iPad 2 launch, Steve Jobs reminded the audience that Apple had launched the first iPad at "an unbelievable price". He said: "People weren’t sure that it was an unbelievable price. Well, ask our competitors now..."

Rotman Epps agrees and says that the key challenge to Apple is likely to come from a company that is prepared to discount the tablet aggressively to get customers on board. She tips Amazon as one company that might be prepared to do this. With its own e-book, digital music and online storage services already in place and a streaming film service reportedly on its way, Amazon certainly has the makings of a service that could compete with Apple’s iTunes and App Store.

Other companies to watch, says Rotman Epps, include Sony - who could bring a formidable gaming pedigree to a tablet computer - and Microsoft. She says: "We haven’t heard the last from Microsoft."

Apple describes the iPad as a "post-PC" device, though admittedly one that has to be connected to a PC with a cable before you can use it. Talking to journalists last year, Jobs said: "I’m trying to think of a good analogy. When we were an agrarian nation, all cars were trucks. But as people moved more towards urban centers, people started to get into cars. I think PCs are going to be like trucks. Less people will need them."

The tablet takes computing into places it could previously go. Archaeologists are using them in the field, doctors are using them in patient consultations and teachers are using them in the classroom. Their mobility, combined with power, changes how they can be used. Passing a tablet computer around is far more natural than passing a laptop back and forth.

To Jobs’ analogy of trucks and cars, we could add smartphones, perhaps as the equivalent of the Boris Bike: always around when you need them, handy for a quick trip. According to Strategy Analytics, almost 300 million smartphones were shipped worldwide last year, a figure that puts Apple’s 15 million iPads into perspective. In the last quarter of 2010, smartphone shipments overtook PC shipments for the first time ever. Both smartphones and tablets will continue to erode demand for PCs.

Motorola’s new Atrix mobile phone has a ‘lapdock’ accessory. Plug the phone in and it powers your laptop. Add a multimedia dock and the phone will connect to your TV too. In future your ‘computer’ could be whatever screen your phone is connected to - and not connected physically either, as Apple is showing with its AirPlay system, your smartphone or tablet is perfectly capable of streaming content wirelessly.

We are just at the beginning of the ‘post-PC’ era. RBC Capital, in a report published earlier this week, predicted that there will be 400 million tablet users worldwide by 2014. That’s still only a third of the size of the current PC market but times are changing. And fast.

Limited Edition LG Optimus One Phone Unveiled

With cricket World Cup fever in full force, LG has launched its limited edition Optimus One P500 phone to mark the event of the ICC World Cup 2011. This collector s item stylish phone is different from the normal edition phone it sports a shiny gold World Cup logo etched on it back. 


The Optimux One smartphone comes with Google s Android OS v2.2 Froyo and is therefore tightly integrated with Google. You only need to log in once into your Google account to automatically synchronize your mails and other settings and start using Gmail, Gtalk, YouTube, Google Maps, etc. The Android Market has thousands of free and paid applications, which can also be downloaded to spice up the phone. That being said, the multimedia part has also been paid attention to. Powered by a 600MHz processor, the phone comes with a 3.2-inch capacitive touchscreen display with 320x480 resolution, 3.15 MP camera, 2 GB memory card, 3G, GPRS, EDGE, Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g, Bluetooth v2.1, A-GPS and many more special features. The Android OS can be upgraded to v2.3 Gingerbread.

Being a limited edition phone, only 1,000 units of this phone will be made. This phone is priced a little higher at Rs. 12,990/- and will be available at all leading stores in eight cities across India.

Google removes rogue Android apps

Google has used a "kill switch" to clean up phones hit by rogue Android applications.

Almost 60 malware-infected programmes were found on the Android Market on 1 March and estimates suggest they may have been downloaded by 200,000 users.

The malicious apps hid data-stealing code inside games, utilities and other programs.

The "kill switch" allows Google to remotely uninstall software from handsets running its operating system.

58 malicious applications were removed from the Android Market by Google soon after it was alerted to their presence.

It suspended the accounts of the developers who apparently uploaded the apps, and also contacted the police.

In a blog posting, Google said it had activated the remote application removal following an internal investigation.

The company plans to push out a security update, designed to close the loopholes that the malicious applications took advantage of.

It is not clear when this will arrive on handsets, as in many cases the timing will be under the control of mobile operators rather than Google.

The malicious code inside the applications used vulnerabilities in early versions of Android's operating system to view and steal key information such as a phone's unique ID number.

It also opened a backdoor onto the phone which would have allowed attackers to install any code they wanted.

Google's action will not entirely remove the threat from the Android ecosystem.

This is because the malicious apps have been found on several unofficial versions of the Android marketplace where many more users may have downloaded and installed them.

Bangalore civic body to provide free medical aid to Mavallipura victims

An inter-disciplinary medical team comprising nephrologists, gynaecologists, physicians, skin specialists and others from leading hospitals will conduct medical camps in all affected villages at Mavallipura landfill, over the next six months to identify the causative factors and extend help to the victims.

Those who are already suffering from various terminal illnesses will be comprehensively taken care of at the cost of Bruhat Bangalore Mahanagara Palike (BBMP) and the government. This was announced by BBMP commissioner Siddaiah on Saturday after visiting the site.

Over the years, the villagers of Mavallipura and surrounding areas have been protesting against the landfill, which was causing health hazard. On March 1, the villagers unable to bear the stench, blocked hundreds of trucks from disposing the putrefying waste brought from Bangalore.

Following this, Siddaiah held a meeting with them on March 3 and undertook a site visit along with his engineering, police and medical teams and visited both the Ramky and Bailappa landfills and listened to the villagers’ problems.

According to the Environment Support Group (ESG), the commissioner also assured a series of initiatives, including safe drinking water.

He said that with the assistance of the Bangalore Water Supply Sewerage Board (BWSSB), the possibility of sourcing Cauvery water will be explored and extended to the affected villages.

If possible, all surface and ground water sources will be monitored for contamination regularly and steps taken to control the situation. Animal husbandry specialists will undertake a comprehensive analysis of the impact on cattle and sheep and appropriate relief will be extended. Similarly, the impact on agriculture and horticulture will be analysed and remedial steps taken.

“The condition of the environment around the landfill has created a variety of complex problems. BBMP takes full responsibility for this. But Bangaloreans also must take a share of their responsibility for being a cause of such a colossal problem,” Siddaiah had said during his visit.

Garbage dump posing health threat to Mavallipura residents

A dump of a problem
The dump, the residents say, has been a health hazard as well as an environmental hazard.

The Environment Support Group (ESG) and Dalit Sangarsh Samithi(DSS) requested the Bruhat Bangalore Mahanagara Palike (BBMP) Commissioner Siddaiah to come to the site and personally see the travails of the villages living in the vicinity and beyond.

When Siddiah visited the site on Saturday, the villagers had given him first-hand accounts their misery because of the dump. They said they had contracted skin allergies and diseases, fevers, and gastrointestinal disorders. Even during the day they have to use mosquito nets, they said. And the stray dog menace has increased.

In addition to these problems, they showed him lakes, ponds, wells and bore wells, which have become toxic.

The eco groups impressed upon him the danger of increasing number of scavenging birds that threaten the defense aircraft of the Yelahanka Air Force.

The base is situated just five kilometers away from the dump.

Whose dump is it?
Hyderabad-based private firm Ramky Environmental Engineers were given the contract for disposing off garbage scientifically. They produce fertilizer from at least 35 percent of the garbage while the rest goes to land fill.

Nearly 700 tons of garbage is cared away to this site from Bengaluru every day. The dumping organic material is causing irreparable damage to the land, water, and people.

The villagers and ESG allege that the firm violated the contractual obligations.

Mr Leo F. Saldanha of ESG said, "The private contractor is continuously violating the terms of the contract. The landfill is very close to defense establishments, drinking water sources, etc., and the private firm claims that the landfill is scientifically run in total conformity with applicable norms.

However, the villagers refute this claim and the Commissioner was apprised that the villagers were right when he visited the site.”

Commissioner orders some measures
The commissioner, after hearing the villagers’ misery, announced some measures.
He directed his subordinates to conduct free health-check-ups every month in surrounding villages.

The water quality in the lakes, wells, and ponds will be tested in the next three days, and pesticides will be sprayed to control mosquitoes, he said.

He said he would impress upon the government the problem of crop losses, and also would make efforts to get Cuavery water to the villages.

His organization would get in touch with the private firm which was employed for garbage disposal, and ensure the contractual obligations are adhered to and garbage disposed off scientifically.

Three-armed robot performs cardiac surgery

A rare heart surgery, that involved a robot, was recently performed at the Chettinad Health City in Chennai. The robotically-assisted surgery performed on a 23-year-old auto driver, involved simultaneous replacement of both the aortal and mitral valves.

The surgery, performed by a three-armed robot, took four hours and cost Rs2.25 lakh. According to Dr Ravi Kumar, who performed the surgery, the best part about using a robot in cardiac surgery was that it obviated the need to open the patient's heart and the procedure required only a small 4cm incision.

According to Dr Kumar this is not possible with normal surgeries that are performed without a robot.

Robotic surgery is fairly new in the country and can be used in a variety of medical procedures according to Dr Kumar. He said a lot of precision and intense training was required since the robotic hands actually perform the procedure, but performed under the control of a trained surgeon.

Dr Kumar, however, added that one of the biggest disadvantages was the lack of sensory perception as with a surgeon actually performing the surgery himself.

Quoting Dr Naresh Trehan, pioneer of the surgery and who is also chairman and managing director of Medanta and Medicity in New Delhi, The Times of India reported that robotic surgery had come a long way from a three-armed robot to a four-armed robot now.

He said an institute now trained doctors to perform robotic surgeries and there were people doing colon surgery, prostate surgery and cardiac surgery using robots almost on a daily basis.

According to Kumar the biggest advantage of the robotic procedure was the time of recovery. He predicted that in the next 10 years almost 80 per cent of surgeries in the country would be done using robots.

Kohli retains No. 3 position in ICC ODI rankings

Virat Kohli continued to retain the third place even as Yuvraj Singh’s match-winning knock against Ireland helped him move to 22nd, an improvement of one place, in the ICC ODI rankings issued on Monday.

Gautam Gambhir, too, retained the 13th position in the rankings for batsmen. Ireland’s stunning win over England last week have helped them leapfrog Zimbabwe.

The sensational victory in Bangalore last Wednesday earned Ireland enough points to move into 10th position in the rankings. Australia remains the top-ranked side, with India in second place. South Africa conceded the third place to Sri Lanka after Sunday’s six-run defeat against England.

Cricket-England expose South Africa's batting vulnerabilities

CHENNAI, March 7 (Reuters) - Whatever pretensions South Africa had of having overcome their tendency to crack under pressure in big tournaments lay shattered after their demoralising six-run defeat by England in Sunday's thriller.

The team did not put a foot wrong against West Indies and the Netherlands but suddenly came unstuck chasing a modest 172-run target. Their brittle middle and lower order batting was exposed in the process and the result threw open Group B.

In the post-match press conference, South African captain Graeme Smith was invariably posed the question he is now tired of answering -- whether his team choked yet again.

"I would not say so, we have handled ourselves well in a number of situations over the last couple of years to be able to say we can cope with pressure," he said.

The match, however, suggested otherwise.

The team seemed to have inherited the big stage fright that led to their World Cup semi-final heart-breaks in 1992, 1999 and 2007.

Seeking a third successive win in the tournament, South Africa's batting frailties were laid bare by England's inspired bowling attack on Sunday.

The pattern so far suggests South Africa's total depends on the start provided by Hashim Amla up front and then AB de Villiers at number four.

The team owe their victories against West Indies and the Netherlands to de Villiers' back-to-back centuries. The right-handed batsman, battling a back problem, could not make much of an impact on Sunday and that effectively led to South Africa's downfall.

In fact, de Villiers' rich form glossed over some of South Africa's batting vulnerability which the English attack so cruelly exposed.

As his scores of two, four and 15 in the three matches so far would suggest, Jacques Kallis has been woefully out of form since joining the squad after an injury layoff.

Also the comprehensive victories in the first two matches meant their lower middle order was not really tested.

So when the chips were down on Sunday, JP Duminy or Morne van Wyk could not guide them home.

"I think this is the first (outing) they had after a long time. But I think we need to show a little more faith in the guys, it's just one game," Smith assured.

ICC approves Morgan as replacement for injured Pietersen

The ICC today approved Eoin Morgan as a replacement player for the injured Kevin Pietersen in the England World Cup squad.

The confirmation was conveyed by ICC to the England and Wales Cricket Board on behalf of the Event Technical Committee of the Cricket World Cup 2011. Morgan will replace Pietersen who has a hernia injury.

Any injury-based replacement requires a written submission to the event technical committee along with a diagnosis from a medical practitioner as to the extent of the injury, ICC said in a statement. Once replaced, a player may not return to the squad save as an approved subsequent replacement for another injured player.

Morgan is a 24-year-old middle-order batsman and has played in 38 ODIs for England in which he has scored 1,160 runs at an average of 40. Pietersen is the 14th player to be replaced in the tournament.

As with all players in the tournament, the eligibility of a replacement player is subject to approval by the ICC before that player can be officially added to the squad.

I take each day as a birthday: Anupam

Veteran Bollywood actor Anupam Kher, who will celebrate his 56th birthday Monday, reveals he never plans for his birthdays because each day is new and special for him.

"I don't plan anything for my birthday because I believe in celebrating life than just a single day. I believe that each day is a new day and a special day so why just single out one singe day?" Anupam told IANS.

The two-time national award-winning actor made his acting debut in the 1982 Hindi movie "Aagman", but carved a niche for himself by playing a grieving father in the 1984 movie "Saaransh". His portrayal garnered immense critical and commercial acclaim.

Then there was no looking back for the actor, who has done more than 400 films in his about three decade long acting career. Some of his unforgettable films include "Karma", "Daddy", "Ram Lakhan", "Lamhe", "Dil, "Saudagar", "Hum Aapke Hain Kaun...!", "Dilwale Dulhania Le Jayenge" and "Maine Gandhi Ko Nahin Mara".

Anupam also ventured into direction with "Om Jai Jagadish" in the year 2003. However he is yet to tread the same path again. Also, the versatile actor manages his acting school Actor Prepares that has branches in Mumbai, Chandigarh, Ahmedabad and Britain.

The Padma Shri winner will balance work and family on his birthday.

"I will be inaugurating The EU Film Festival in Mumbai on my birthday. Then my parents are in town, so will catch up with them and spend time with them. No other plans," he revealed.

I will never abuse Arbaaz: Anurag Kashyap

After allegedly taunting the Khan brothers on how they stole his brother Abhinav's thunder as a director of Dabangg, Anurag has come clean about the issue.

He wrote, "I have a lot of respect for Arbaaz, Sohail and his father. I will never abuse them." He addressed this tweet to Salman and Arbaaz though one wonders why he hasn't mentioned Salman's name in the tweet.

Anurag has apparently deleted his earlier statuses which read, " Salman Khan thinks he made my brother's life. Hope he does the same for Arbaaz when he does Dabangg 2. All The Best."

He had also posted another message, "Abhinav Singh Kashyap, you rock... I love you... Show them what you are made off." The "them" clearly means the Khan brothers.

It all began after Arbaaz confirmed that he and not Abhinav will direct the sequel of the blockbuster. Arbaaz had said, "Hey guys it's true, I will be directing the sequel of Dabangg. Abhinav for some personal and professional reasons opted out."

After Anurag's outbursts, Arbaaz reacted, "Instead of GRATTITUDE some people show ATTITUDE. Wah kya zamana aa gaya hai. Time will tell. Kabhi asliat ko bahar aane mein time lagta hai. Successful people always have two things on their lips. "Silence" N "Smile". Smile to solve the problem and Silence to avoid the Problem."

Salman has kept mum on the issue so far.

Amitabh Bachchan's Next Production Buddha

After the success of Paa Amitabh Bachchan has announced his next production, which will also star him.

Big B, who is currently busy wrapping up Prakash Jha's Aarakshan, unveiled the title on his website today.

"Its official now. The title of the next Amitabh Bachchan Corp production will be spelt Buddha, with the tag line... hoga terra baap!. Just making sure it does not mingle with Gautam Buddha, the saint.

"And its first day starts tomorrow in Mumbai and I shall be joining it as soon as I finish from here on Aarakshan. Will have more details on it once I join them," Amitabh Bachchan said .

Sensex falls 264 points on political concerns, oil prices

Mumbai, March 7 (IANS) A benchmark index for Indian equities markets fell 264 points Monday on soaring crude oil prices and concerns of political uncertainty after an ally decided to withdraw its six ministers from Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's United Progressive Alliance (UPA) government.

The 30-share sensitive index (Sensex) of the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE), which opened in the red at 18,361.65 points, closed at 18,222.67 points, down 1.43 percent or 263.78 points from the previous close of 18,486.45 points.

The benchmark Sensex touched a high of 18,361.65 points and low of 18,058.71 points in the intraday trade.

The 30-scrip Sensex that had gained 4.44 percent last week on the budget proposals, opened the week on a negative note mainly because of concerns of political uncertainty.

The DMK, a southern ally of the ruling coalition, said Saturday it was pulling out of the UPA and that its six ministers would quit after the failure of seat-sharing talks with the Congress for the April 13 assembly polls in Tamil Nadu.

At the National Stock Exchange (NSE), the broader 50-share S&P CNX Nifty closed 1.36 percent or 75.60 points down at 5,463.15 points.

The weak sentiment was broad-based across indices and spread over smallcaps and midcaps, as also the 13 sector specific indices of the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE), and all closed in the negative territory.

The BSE midcap index fell 1.41 percent at 6,499.15 points and the BSE smallcap index closed 1.43 percent down at 7,884.86 points.

There was heavy selling pressure in auto and consumer goods stocks. The BSE auto index slumped 2.55 percent and the consumer goods index fell 2.36 percent.

Maruti Suzuki slumped nearly four percent to Rs.1,264.70. Tata Motors, down 3.64 percent at Rs.1,127.25; Reliance Communication, down 3.48 percent at Rs.90.05; BHEL, down 3.21 percent at Rs.2,018.05; and SBI, down 2.87 percent at Rs.2,622.80 were among the major losers on the Sensex.

Only five out of the 30 scrips that constitute the Sensex closed in the positive terrain. Wipro, up 1.04 percent at Rs.446.20; Tata Power, up 0.96 percent at Rs.1,230.35; Cipla, up 0.38 percent at Rs.305.30; NTPC, up 0.34 percent at Rs.179.60 and ITC, up 0.03 percent at Rs.172.55 were the only gainers.

Most other Asian markets also closed in the red on concerns of rising crude oil prices.

The Japanese Nikkei closed 1.76 percent down at 10,505 points and Hong Kong's Hang Seng fell 0.41 percent at 23,313.20.

However the China's Shanghai Composite index advanced 1.83 percent to close at 2,996.21 points.

Most European markets were in the green. Around mid-day, the French CAC 40 was trading 0.23 percent higher and the German DAX was ruling 0.63 percent up. Britain's FTSE 100 was trading 0.65 percent higher.

Rupee declines by 6 paise Vs dlr on weak equities

MUMBAI: The rupee today declined by 6 paise to close at 45.04/05 against the US currency due to mild dollar demand from importers and weak equity markets.

"Despite dollar trading weaker against a basket of currencies, the rupee traded lower due to high crude prices resulting in more dollar demand by oil importing companies," said Alpari Forex (India) CEO Pramit Brahmbhatt.

Weak stock markets also weighed on the rupee sentiment, he added.

At the Interbank Foreign Exchange (Forex) market, the local currency opened lower at 45.10/11 a dollar from last weekend's close of 44.98/99.

The rupee touched a low of 45.1750 before closing at 45.04/05, down by 6 paise.

The BSE benchmark index Sensex, which was down by nearly 428 points in afternoon deals, too recouped marginally and ended down by nearly 264 points, or 1.43 per cent.

The rupee is likely to remain strong on the back of expected flow from FIIs and any correction in crude prices will add more fuel to it, Brahmbhatt said.

The New York's main contract light sweet crude for April delivery crossed USD 106 a barrel to about 2.5-year high, while Brent North Sea crude for April breached USD 117 a barrel in Asian trade today on continued worries over the unrest in the Middle East.

Foreign Institutional Investors (FIIs) injected USD 305.04 million in last three sessions since March 1.

The rupee premium for the forward dollar ended further up on continued paying pressure from banks and corporates. The benchmark six-month forward dollar premium payable in August settled better at 138-140 paise from 137-139 paise previously.

Far-forward contracts maturing in February also closed higher at 269-271 paise from 266-268 paise last weekend.

The Reserve Bank of India has fixed the reference rate for the dollar at Rs 45.13 and the euro at Rs 63.06.

The rupee retreated to Rs 73.54/56 against the pound sterling from last Friday's close of Rs 73.23/25 and also fell back against the yen to Rs 54.93/95 per 100 yen from Rs 54.45/47 in its previous close.

It remained weak to finish at Rs 63.17/19 per euro from its last close of Rs 62.84/86.

TCS sees robust demand for IT outsourcing in new fiscal

Bangalore, March 7 (IANS) Global software major Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) Monday asserted that demand for IT outsourcing across verticals would be robust in the new fiscal (2011-12) owing to discretionary spending and higher budgets.

'Overall, demand environment is good and getting better as we see IT spending across verticals, including BFSI (banking, financial services and insurance), retail, pharma, hi-tech industry and manufacturing,' TCS chief executive N. Chandrasekaran told reporters here.

Noting that demand for IT outsourcing in the US, which is the largest export market, was growing and much better than in 2010, the top executive said it (demand) was on the recovery mode in Europe though slightly behind the curve.

With the resilient Indian IT industry returning to double digit growth path during the second half of this fiscal (2010-11) after the tech meltdown due to global financial crisis and recession in fiscal 2009-10, Chandrasekaran said the growth opportunities were unfolding as evident from a robust demand pipeline.

'As IT products and services drive efficiencies and businesses of enterprises worldwide, we are seeing multi-year deals happening and new projects on anvil. Though the manufacturing industry has been slow to pick up, it will get better in the next few quarters on spurt in demand for goods and services,' he pointed out.

Though TCS does not give quarterly or annual revenue guidance unlike Infosys and some other IT firms, the chief executive said with a repeat business of 95-97 percent and pricing looking up, the outlook for this quarter and fiscal was bright on annuualised basis, as evident from about 30 percent volume growth in the third quarter (Oct-Dec) of FY 2011.

'In light of the anticipated growth and demand for outsourcing surging, we plan to ramp up our capacity by hiring about 37,000 jobs in the ensuing fiscal (FY 2012) through campuses and direct placement for freshers and laterals,' Chandrasekaran said.

The $6-billion IT bellwether is investing about Rs.1,500 crore in its Thiruvananthapuram facility in Kerala to train about 10,000 freshers at a time.

As the country's largest IT bellwether, TCS is also set to accelerate growth through non-linear initiatives, including new software product iON cloud computing solution for small and medium businesses (SMBs).

'We are targetting $1 billion revenue over the next five years from non-linear growth by offering new products and services to SMBs and business process outsourcing (BPO) sector,' Chandrasekaran added.

Ivorian rebels capture major town

Cote d'Ivoire's rebels say they have captured a town after a fierce battle in the country's volatile west near the border with Liberia, triggering panic among tens of thousands of refugees already fleeing violence over a deepening political crisis.

The New Forces rebels said in a statement on their website that they seized Toulepleu on Sunday.

The statement said: "The large town of Toulepleu in the west of Ivory Coast is now in the hands of the army of the New Forces (rebels) since Sunday at noon following an intense combat."

The town near Liberia's border was the scene of heavy fighting on Sunday between forces backing the political rivals who both claim to be Ivory Coast's president months following a disputed election.

The rebels are backed by the UN-recognised president, Alassane Ouattara, while government forces are allied with Laurent Gbagbo, who is refusing to step down.

Gbagbo has been in power for more than a decade and his security forces - who insist they are still holding Toulepleu - are accused of abducting, torturing and killing political opponents.

Saah Nyuma, the deputy director of the Liberia Refugee Repatriation and Resettlement Commission, said he heard the sounds of explosions coming from Ivory Coast and that at least one mortar shell fell on the Liberian side of the border on Sunday.

Analysts fear the political crisis could spill over into a full-blown civil war.

Nearly 400 people have been killed since the November 28 vote, according to a UN and an Associated Press tally of bodies.

The UN refugee agency says more than 200,000 people have fled fighting in Abidjan in the last week, and more than 70,000 have crossed the border into Liberia to avoid fighting in the country's west.

Over the weekend, gangs of young people aided by uniformed police ransacked houses in Abidjan belonging to officials allied with Ouattara.

And on Thursday soldiers fatally shot six women who were protesting against Gbagbo's refusal to step down.

Governments around the world swiftly condemned the killings, with Britain's foreign office minister for Africa, Henry Bellingham, saying he was "deeply concerned" about the deteriorating security situation in Cote d'Ivoire.

He also said he was "appalled" to hear that women were killed during a peaceful demonstration.

Profile: Egyptian Prime Minister Essam Sharaf

Having joined the protests in Tahrir Square that toppled President Hosni Mubarak on 11 February, he is a popular figure with Egypt's young revolutionaries.

The 59-year-old former transport minister was named Egypt's new prime minister on 3 March by the country's military rulers.

He replaces Ahmad Shafiq, appointed by Mr Mubarak in the dying days of his regime and roundly rejected by the opposition forces.

The US-educated civil engineer is now tasked with leading the country's transition to democracy.

Addressing crowds of supporters in Cairo's central Tahrir Square a day after his nomination, Mr Sharaf said he derived his legitimacy from the people.

"The task I am trying hard to achieve is to meet your demands, and I will do my best. If I will not be able to fulfil your demands at any time, I will be here [among the crowds of protesters] not here [on the podium]," he told the crowd.

Egypt's largest opposition group, the Muslim Brotherhood, and the secular 6 April Youth Movement, have both welcomed Mr Essam's appointment to the post.
Man of science

Essam Abdulaziz Sharaf was born in Giza governorate in 1952.

He gained a bachelor's degree in civil engineering at Cairo University before completing a doctorate at Purdue University in the US in 1984.

He went on to work as an assistant professor of engineering at Cairo University and King Saud University in Saudi Arabia until his appointment as premier.

During his time in academia, he also acted as a transportation consultant for governments in the UAE, Saudi Arabia and Egypt.

For a brief period from mid-2004 to 2005, he served as transport minister in the former cabinet of Ahmad Nazif and was credited with raising workers' salaries and sacking corrupt officials.

Although he refuses to comment on why he resigned, it was reported that he was unhappy with mismanagement and corruption under Mr Mubarak.

Despite severing official ties with the government in 2005, he stayed on as a chief member of the ruling National Democratic Party until last year.

But he actively supported the revolution, even leading marches in the capital by members of Cairo University's faculty of engineering.

Although a man of science, he is seen as pragmatic, honest and capable of implementing reforms.

Mr Sharaf is also known for his tough stance towards Israel. According to local press reports, he does not support any economic or academic co-operation between Egypt and Israel.

"I am against normalisation of relations with Israel in any area, even in the area of scientific research," he told the independent daily al-Masry al-Youm last year, citing the cases of Palestinian prisoners held in Israeli jails and "fundamental differences" between the two sides.

Other regional issues he has been vocal about include the ongoing dispute with African nations over water from the Nile.

Qaddafi Forces Begin New Air Attack in East

AL UQAYLAH, Libya — Government forces began a new air attack on rebels on Monday in the coastal town of Ras Lanuf, where they had withdrawn after Sunday’s assaults.

The rebel forces were seeking to regroup but needed reinforcements, Mohamad Samir, an army colonel fighting with the rebels, told The Associated Press.

On Sunday, troops loyal to Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi had attacked rebel troops in the coastal town of Bin Jawwad using tanks, helicopters and fighter planes, and pushed them east, stalling, for the moment, hopes by the antigovernment fighters of a steady march toward Tripoli.

That attack began at about 9 a.m. on Sunday, said rebel fighters, who had to retreat down the main coastal road under a barrage of artillery shells, missiles and sniper bullets. Outgunned, the rebels fanned out in the desert and fought back, only to be forced to retreat again.

By 9 p.m., the road east from the city was full of fleeing rebel cars, including several pickup trucks mounted with heavy weapons. More than a dozen ambulances, ferrying wounded and dead rebel fighters, sped toward a hospital in a nearby town. Ambulance drivers and doctors said at least 10 people had been killed, though they expected that number to rise once they were able to reach Bin Jawwad.

A journalist for France24 television was wounded during the fighting, according to a photographer who saw him at a local hospital.

Outside of nearby Ras Lanuf, weary fighters gathered at gas stations, drank milk distributed by volunteers and tore at loaves of bread. Mahmoud Bilkhair, an army second lieutenant fighting with the rebels, sat in his car with other fighters, exhausted and staring out the window.

“We’re trying,” he said. “We’re not advancing. We can’t do anything about it.” But he and other fighters said they would regroup and return to Bin Jawwad.

The rebel defeat, just a day after they celebrated a major victory in taking the oil port at Ras Lanuf, fit into the emerging, grueling rhythm of a conflict where the combatants claim no clear advantage and fight, repeatedly, over a handful of prizes.

In the east, the rebels, full of enthusiasm but short on training and organization, are trying to capture Surt, a stronghold of Colonel Qaddafi that blocks the rebel path to Tripoli. They are also fighting to hold onto the city of Zawiyah, west of Tripoli, where they have accused the loyalists of committing a massacre.

Government troops, having ceded large, strategic parts of the country in recent days, are better armed but still on the defensive as they try to undo rebel gains.

The standoff in Zawiyah continued there on Sunday, a day after forces loyal to Colonel Qaddafi waged a heavy assault toward the city center, then pulled back to close off all roads out.

Rebels in nearby towns said mobile phone service to Zawiyah had been cut off completely and landline service was intermittent, making it hard to gather information. Secondhand reports through rebel networks on Sunday indicated Libyan Army tanks had once again moved into the center of the town.

An hour before dawn on Sunday, Tripoli also erupted in gunfire, the sounds of machine guns and heavier artillery echoing through the capital. It was unclear what set off the gunfire, but quickly, Qaddafi supporters took to the streets, waving green flags and firing guns into the air. Crowds converged on Green Square for a rally, with many people still shooting skyward.

Refugees continued to flee to neighboring countries, sometimes with tragic consequences. The authorities in Crete said that at least three Bangladeshi evacuees from Libya died Sunday after they tried to swim from a Greek ferry toward the island.

As of Friday, about 192,000 people had fled the country, according to the International Organization for Migration. Of those, 104,000 people had crossed into Tunisia and about 87,000 had fled to Egypt. More than 5,000 people are stranded at Libya’s border with Egypt, the organization said, including many Bangladeshis and Sub-Saharan Africans.

Eight British Special Forces soldiers were briefly taken captive by Libyan rebel forces in the east of the country, according to British news reports on Sunday.

The soldiers, from the elite Special Air Service, had been part of a team escorting a British diplomat to meet with Libyan rebels, according to The Sunday Times of London, which first reported on the incident. The newspaper cited anonymous Libyan and British sources and said the men had been held at a military base over the weekend.

Further reports later Sunday suggested that the eight men had been released and were aboard the Cumberland, a Royal Navy ship off the coast of Libya.

The British foreign secretary, William Hague, confirmed in a statement that “a small British diplomatic team” in Benghazi, a rebel-held city in eastern Libya, tried to “initiate contacts with the opposition” but “experienced difficulties, which have now been satisfactorily resolved.”

“They have now left Libya.” Mr. Hague said. The government declined to immediately provide further details.

As rebel leaders have pressed their efforts to form a shadow government in recent days, the focus of the revolutionaries, and their supporters, has shifted from Benghazi toward the fighters making their way west.

After successfully capturing Ras Lanuf, hundreds, and perhaps more than 1,000 rebel fighters were in Bin Jawwad overnight on Saturday. They managed to briefly push farther west, but came under a fierce attack about 9 a.m., the fighters said.

For most of the day, the battle raged in a small area east of the city. Rebel fighters fanned out along the sides of a road, sending squad-size units into the rocky terrain and small hills along the two-lane road in an effort to keep the loyalists from flanking them.

By nightfall, government forces seemed to have firm control of a small town and factory about a half mile east of Bin Jawwad. With mortars, heavy machine guns and tanks, they bombarded rebel positions for hours.

Air strikes pounded the area through the day, and attack helicopters fired on rebel gatherings. There were lingering questions about the intentions of some of the pilots, who seemed to have missed easy targets in recent days. Early on Saturday, a warplane dropped a bomb east of Ras Lanuf, but it did not explode. Later, the plane bombed the same position again, but missed.

On the outskirts of Ras Lanuf on Sunday, the bodies of two pilots could be seen in the wreckage of their downed jet, which the rebels claimed they shot down on Saturday. The debris was scattered for hundreds of yards around the pilots, and one of them appeared to still be wearing his Libyan Air Force uniform.

In interviews, rebel fighters said the loyalists were using residents of Bin Jawwad as human shields, making women stand next to their houses. The rebels said they held back their fire as a result. But witnesses said that the rebels seemed to use every weapon at their disposal, including Katyusha rockets, multiple grenade launchers and antiaircraft guns as they tried to dislodge the loyalists. It was not enough.

Rebels have said they have been attacked repeatedly by foreign mercenaries hired by Colonel Qaddafi. But after the battle in Bin Jawwad, several rebel fighters said that though they saw mercenaries, many of the soldiers they faced were Libyans, wearing army uniforms. They said that for much of the day, it had been hard to determine who was firing at them, as they ran from repeated shellings.

As the rebels fell back, witnesses reported seeing bodies on the road. Rebels gave their own estimates of the dead: one man said he had seen two bodies, another said he had seen seven. Throughout the afternoon, there were rumors that reinforcements would be coming from Benghazi to help retake Bin Jawwad.

As the rebels retreated, they stopped to pick up about a half-dozen Filipino factory workers from the small town as the government advanced. The workers got into a pickup truck and were driven to safety.

All-woman crew for 13 Air India flights on Women’s Day

To mark International Women’s Day, Air India, for the second consecutive year, is operating on Monday night an ultra long haul flight from Delhi to Toronto, with an all-woman crew.

Over the years, Air India has operated many flights, both on international and domestic sectors, with an all-woman crew. Last year, for the first time in the history of civil aviation, Air India operated the ultra long haul flight from Mumbai to New York with an all-woman crew to commemorate the occasion.

Nasim Zaidi, Secretary, Civil Aviation, is slated to flag off Air India’s AI 187 on the Delhi-Toronto sector, operated by an all-woman crew from Terminal - 3 of IGI Airport, Delhi.

Flight AI 187 will be the first of the 13 all-woman crew flights scheduled for operation by Air India on March 8, 2011, across its domestic and international network, to mark International Women’s Day, an Air India spokesperson said here.

Capt. Rashmi Miranda will be the Commander and Capt. Sunita Narula, the First Officer on this commemorative flight. Ms. Harpreet A De. Singh, will carry out a Line Observation Safety Audit. The flight will be despatched by Ms. Rashmi Verma.

The national carrier provides equal opportunities to women in all areas of its activity, including specialised technical areas and senior management. Women Pilots, Flight Dispatchers, Aircraft Maintenance Engineers, Safety and Quality Auditors, Cabin Crew, Doctors, Technical Officers, Simulator Maintenance Engineers, Ground Instructors for training pilots and so forth form part of a highly skilled, technically proficient team of women at Air India, the spokesperson said. Air India has a large contingent of 157 women pilots flying its fleet of wide and narrow body aircraft on international and domestic routes. Air India has more than 5,300 women employees on its workforce.

Air India’s scheduled flights with the all-woman crew on the domestic sectors on Tuesday include AI 409/410 on the Delhi-Patna-Delhi sector, AI-469 on the Delhi-Raipur-Nagpur-Delhi route, AI-811/812 on the Delhi-Lucknow-Delhi route, AI-603/604 on the Mumbai-Bangalore-Mumbai sector, AI-569/167 on the Chennai-Mumbai-Chennai, AI804/506 on the Bangalore-Delhi-Bangalore sector, and Air India Express flight IX302 between Kozhikode and Mumbai.

Meira Kumar disfavours dilution of anti-dowry law

Lok Sabha Speaker Meira Kumar today disfavoured dilution of the anti-dowry law saying any legislation which is for the safety of women should not be tinkered with.

"Safety, dignity and equality of women are very important," Kumar said while interacting with women journalists here. Questioned on her views on the dilution of 498(A), the anti-dowry law, which some sections of civil society argue is too harsh, she said, "I am not in favour of dilution of any law which is for the safety of women."

Women's groups and the National Commission for Women have consistently opposed any amendment to soften the law under which a woman or her relative can file a complaint against her husband and his relatives for subjecting her to cruelty and the offence is non-bailable.

Kumar also asked political parties to resolve their differences over the women's reservation Bill. "I would want that all parties would arrive at a consensus. That is the reason why it is being stalled," she said during the interaction on the eve of the international women's day, which was attended among others by members of the Indian Women's Press Corps.

Two-thirds of Indians in Libya evacuated: MEA

With another 1,400 Indian nationals having been flown out of Libya in the preceding 24 hours, the total number of Indian evacuees has crossed 12,000.

MV Red Star One returned to Malta from Misurata with all the 301 Indians desirous of leaving Libya and the passengers returned to India last night on special Jet Airways and Kingfisher flights, the Ministry of External Affairs said today.

Giving an update on the evacuation process taken up since February 26, the Ministry said MV Red Star One would again sail for Sirte (Libya) and is expected to evacuate 600 persons to Malta.

“Presently, we have 1600 of our nationals in Sirte, many of who may be heading for Tripoli by road to be air lifted from there,” it said.

The Ministry said the arrival of MV Scotia Prince, which was on its way back to Alexandria, Egypt, with 972 persons from Benghazi (Libya) on board, has been delayed due to some engine trouble and is now expected to reach tomorrow evening.

All passengers will be flown back to India on three Egypt Air and an IL-76 flights on March 9.

Wednesday 2 March 2011

New CIA Web User Stats Boost Internet Explorer, Hurt Firefox Share

Updated numbers from the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) about the number of Internet users on a country-by-country basis helped boost Internet Explorer market share last month and resulted in a loss for Mozilla's Firefox.

Internet Explorer global market share was up slightly from 56 percent in January to 56.77 percent in February. Firefox, meanwhile, dipped from 22.75 in January to 21.74 percent last month.

Those numbers, however, include the new data from the CIA, which showed tremendous growth in Internet access use in China, but a decrease in other developing countries. In January, for example, the CIA numbers showed 298 million Web users in China; with the new data, that jumped to 389 million last month.

"With the new C.I.A. numbers factored in, Firefox loses global share since many of the countries it is most popular in (Western European, in particular) now have a lower percentage of global Internet users," Net Applications said in a statement. "Internet Explorer gains as browser usage shifts to countries with higher percentages of Internet Explorer users."

The U.S. now has 245 million Internet users, the CIA said, followed by Japan with 99 million, Brazil with 76 million, and Germany with 65 million.

Google's Chrome managed to stay above the 10 percent mark that it cracked last month. The browser inched up slightly, from 10.7 percent in January to 10.93 percent last month.

Safari, meanwhile, was at 6.36 percent, followed by Opera at 2.15 percent, a very slight increase and decrease, respectively.

In terms of what version of the browser people are using, IE8 is still tops with 34.95 percent of the market. Firefox 3.6 comes in second with 17.82 percent, followed by IE6 at 11.33 percent and IE7 at 8.05 percent. Chrome 9 rounds out the top five at 7.56 percent.

On Feburary 10, Microsoft unveiled the release candidate for the next version of its browser, IE9. It secured 2 million downloads in its first week, and has since hit 11 million downloads, Microsoft said in a Tuesday blog post.

In total, the IE9 Beta and IE9 RC has been downloaded more than 36 million times since September, said Roger Capriotti, director of IE product marketing.

According to Net Applications, about 0.59 percent of worldwide Internet users are accessing the Web via IE9, up from 0.50 percent in January, and 0.46 percent in December.

IE9 is Launching Either March 14 or March 24

A rogue tweet from the official MSDN India Twitter account has apparently let the cat out of the bag in regards to the release date for the much-anticipated IE9. Though it’s since been deleted, Pocket-Lint reports that the tweet stated the launch would take place during Tech.Ed in Bangalore, India, which is scheduled for March 23-25. Conveniently, Brian Hall, GM of Internet Explorer And Windows Live, is set to give a March 24 keynote speech.

However, if another rumor is to be believed, we may not even have to wait until March 24. Download Squad cites its own sources that say Microsoft will release the final version of Internet Explorer 9 at the SXSW conference on March 14. Equally as telling as the fact that IE boss Brian Hall is giving a keynote speech at Tech.Ed, Microsoft has an IE party scheduled for March 14. The official occasion is to “Celebrate the Beauty of the Web” but that seems a little wishy-washy to us. Celebrating something bigger, Microsoft?