Friday, June 4, 2010

Obama to attend Krishna reception; will visit India in Nov -- Courtesy: Indian Express

Fri, Jun 4 04:42 AM



US President Barack Obama announced Thursday that he has accepted an invitation from Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to visit India in November this year.

"I am delighted to announce tonight that I plan to visit India in early November," Obama said in a speech at the reception for the US-India Strategic Dialogue held in Washington.

In a special gesture, US President Barack Obama will also be attending a reception to be hosted by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton for her Indian counterpart S M Krishna here. Obama will highlight opportunities for increased bilateral cooperation in areas like defence, trade, energy and climate change.

Setting aside protocol, Obama will drive down from the White House to the Foggy Bottom headquarters of the State Department to attend the reception to be hosted for the External Affairs Minister and other members of his delegation, who are here for the first Indo-US Strategic Dialogue.

The President will be going to the State Department, where the Strategic Dialogue is to be held, "given his personal interest in further strengthening our bilateral partnership," US National Security Council spokesman, Mike Hammer, said.

Obama's gesture to attend the reception tonight for the External Affairs Minister is being considered as rare on the part of the US President. US officials say Obama, despite having to spend much of his time on pressing issues like Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iran, the Middle East and Korean peninsula, has shown personal interest in building strategic relationship with India.

Besides the President, Pretty Woman star Julia Roberts and sci-fi Jurassic Park director Steven Spielberg would be among chosen few to grace a gala reception. Also present in the reception would be some popular tennis stars. Knowing that Krishna is an avid tennis player, Clinton has made it a point to invite some top tennis stars, sources said.

10 romance tips for men, by Miranda Kerr - Courtesy: ANI

Fri, May 21 05:40 PM



Sydney, May 21 (ANI): Australian model Miranda Kerr has offered men ten tips on how they can have romantic harmony with their partners and continue doing so.

Kerr, 27, told men's lifestyle website AskMen.com that usually it is the little things that count, and that no matter what, they should at all times be themselves and pay attention to their partner's needs.he also said that staying healthy, showing affection and a willingness to pamper are also attractive qualities in the eyes of the fairer sex.

"In my experience, it is the random small gestures that I find the most romantic," the Sydney Morning Herald quoted her as telling the website.

"It could be something as simple as making me a cup of tea or being given a foot massage while we are watching a movie at home after a long day at work.

"If more men made an effort to do these little things for their partner throughout their everyday life they would be guaranteed to have a more romantic relationship," she added.

Kerr's 10 romance tips:

1. Treat her like a goddess

2. Pamper her

3. Be healthy

4. Get a baby sitter

5. Tell her she is beautiful and romance her

6. Don't be afraid to show her love

7. Know what you want

8. Connect with her

9. Listen to her

10. Buy the right size (ANI)

Fashion goes the zodiac way - Courtesy: Indiatimes.com

Wed, Jun 2 09:30 AM



New Delhi, June 1 -- Ever thought you could wear clothes and shoes that not just look stylish but also bring peace, prosperity and harmony in your life? Yes you can, if your clothes and shoes have been specially designed according to your zodiac sign. Colours play a major role in this genre.

"They can have a negative effect, if they don't match your personality," says Kappil Kishor, the only professional designer in India for zodiac dresses. Kishor has been in this business for the past five years under the label Fortune Designing.

"Before getting a dress designed there is a thorough study of the person's kundli," he adds. After colours, next in line are the fabrics and textures.

"There are two kinds of fabrics - natural (extracted from plants and animals) and man made (chemical based). Fabrics are made keeping the elements like air, water, fire and earth in mind.

For example, people with fire sign are given natural fibre as this cools their body temperature and gives them positive vibes. But people with water sign can go in for man made fibre," explains Kishor.

"Lot of people come to get their bridal lehngas designed as it's considered very auspicious. People also come in for day-to-day clothing like ladies' suits, corporate suits and dresses for vacations," he added.

The prices for these pieces range from Rs. 10,000 to Rs 2.5 lakhs.

The zodiac shoes, too, are based on two important elements - colour and wood. The shoes are developed on the basis of chromopathy - healing with colour.

"The shoes are done in synthetic and the sole is made of astrological wood instead of leather. Leather is considered inauspicious according to Indian beliefs," says Swati Modo, the owner of Serendipty that specialises in zodiac and horoscopic shoes.

ATMs to be tuned for more cash flow - Courtesy: India Today

Wed, Jun 2 12:26 PM



With private sector banks like HDFC Bank increasing the withdrawal limit for their premium clients, the currency storage capacity of automated teller machines (ATMs) would need to be increased besides hiking the number of higher- denomination notes stored in these machines.

According to independent banking sector analyst Ramesh Bhojwani, a similar facility is offered by most foreign banks for its premium customers.

"These customers are basically account holders with deposits anywhere in the range of Rs 3 crore and above. For such preferred customers the banks have special titanium and gold cards through which they can withdraw and transact with very high upper limits," he said.

Such initiatives would naturally mean banks having to stack more currency notes of higher denomination in the ATMs.

"They would have to increase the capacity by adding more Rs 500 and Rs 1,000 notes or add more machines as the transactions would have an impact on the money supply in the ATMs," he added.

An HDFC Bank spokesperson said debit cards usage at ATMs and POS (point of sales) has been rapidly increasing over the past couple of years. "Many of our customers wanted higher limits, too. We believe it as a convenience that customers will find useful," he said.

He added that to cater to the increase in demand, the bank will be using a mix of more cassettes and more machines per room or get the machines to dispense a larger number of Rs 1,000 notes.

Earlier, banks used to deploy the two cassette ATMs, which had a storage capacity of around Rs 12 lakh. The four cassette ATMs now being used by banks have a storage capacity of around Rs 25 lakh.

Going forward, if the denomination of the currency notes is increased to add more of Rs 500 and Rs 1,000 notes, the capacity could go up to Rs 40 lakh.

While HDFC Bank has increased the withdrawal and shopping limits of its HDFC Bank Imperia Gold Cards to Rs 1 lakh and Rs 1.25 lakh, respectively, from the earlier limit of Rs 50,000 a day, ICICI Bank has set the withdrawal and transaction limits at Rs 1 lakh and Rs 1.5 lakh, respectively, on its Titanium, Platinum and Signature assortment of debit cards per day. Other private sector banks have a limit of Rs 50,000 a day.

Jaivinder Singh Gill, managing director of NCR India, a leading ATM manufacturer and service provider, said that a typical ATM with four cassette holders can store anywhere between 5,000 to 10,000 notes with the number of transactions per day varying from 200 to 600.

Recently, NCR launched the NCR SelfServ 32, India's first 'No Envelope' Multi Function Intelligent Deposit ATM, which has a storage capacity of around 10,000 notes besides being able to recycle the notes deposited by the customers, Gill added.

"The new ATMs offer a diverse range of intelligent 'no envelope' cash deposit and recycling options, including deposit and validation of up to 200 notes per transaction and up to four dispense/recycle cassettes with a total capacity of over 10,000 notes with a single dispenser," he said.

Reproduced From Mail Today. Copyright 2010. All rights reserved.

Facebook cited as evidence in most divorces -- Courtesy: ANI

Thu, Jun 3 02:41 PM



Washington, June 3 (ANI): A new survey has found that social networking site Facebook is being cited in most divorce cases as the main provider of evidence of spouses cheating.

The survey was conducted on some of the nation's top divorce lawyers, and they revealed that their clients come to court armed with evidence they got from the website.

"More and more I have clients coming in and I say, 'What are you here today?' And they say, 'Facebook'," Fox News quoted divorce attorney Mary Cay Trace as saying.

"You can now search beyond your neighbours and your co-workers if you're trying to find somebody to replace what you think is missing in your marriage," she stated.

A mother of two showed via Skype Internet love notes posted between her husband and an old grade-school flame he reconnected with on Facebook.

Within months, the 13-year marriage was over, with her husband's new woman also ending her own marriage. The families had two children each.

But it is not always the betrayed spouse who stumbles across the Internet evidence. Even worse, it's friends, neighbours and sometimes the children who bust their parent. (ANI)

Phys Ed: Does Massage Help After Exercise? - -- Courtesy: New York Times

June 2, 2010, 12:01 am



MoMo Productions/Getty ImagesMichael Tschakovsky, an associate professor in the School of Kinesiology and Health Studies at Queen’s University in Kingston, Ontario, enjoys a post-exercise massage as much as anyone. But unlike those of us who happily drowse through the massage therapist’s assurance that the pummeling and kneading is speeding blood flow to our muscles and draining them of built-up lactic acid, Mr. Tschakovsky took notes. His academic specialty is the study of blood flow to muscles, particularly in diseases like diabetes, and he decided to put the therapists’ words to the test.

Recruiting 12 healthy young men, he and his colleagues had them exercise their forearm muscle to exhaustion. The men accomplished this by squeezing a specialized handgrip at 40 percent of maximum force for two minutes, nonstop. “If that doesn’t sound hard, try it,” Mr. Tschakovsky says. By the end of the two minutes, the men’s arms shook with fatigue. Their hearts beat faster, and lactic acid, measured by a catheter inserted directly into the deep vein that drains the muscle, enveloped the straining forearm muscle.

Lactic acid is widely believed by many of us outside academia to cause muscle fatigue and soreness after exercise. Physiologists are more skeptical. Recent studies have found few negative effects from lactic acid and, in fact, have shown that it provides fuel for tired muscles. But the studies are not definitive, so “it’s still theoretically possible” that lactic acid has some impact on fatigue, Mr. Tschakovsky says, especially in events that involve repeated short bouts of intense exercise. More to the point, “most people think that one of the main benefits of massage is that it removes lactic acid,” he says, whether such dispersal is important or not. “We wanted to see if massage fulfills” that promise.

So after the volunteers had exhausted their arms and pumped them full of lactic acid, they either lay quietly for 10 minutes (passive recovery), intermittently squeezed a handgrip at about10 percent of their maximum strength for the same 10 minutes (active recovery) or had their arm massaged by a certified sports-massage therapist for 10 undoubtedly pleasurable minutes. Throughout, blood flow to the forearm muscle of the volunteers was measured by ultrasound, while their lactic acid concentrations were monitored via blood samples.

The results, published in the latest issue of the journal Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise, are a blow, at least to those of us who justify our massages as medicinal. It turned out that massage did not increase blood flow to the tired muscle; it reduced it. Every stroke, whether long and slow or deep and kneading, cut off blood flow to the forearm muscle. Although the flow returned to normal between strokes, the net effect was to lessen the amount of blood that reached the muscle, particularly compared with the amount that flowed to the forearm muscle during 10 minutes of passive recovery. Meanwhile, active recovery reduced blood flow as well, since muscular contractions, however slight, compress blood vessels in the muscle briefly. But the overall reduction of blood flow was significantly less during active recovery than during the massage session.

As a “direct result” of the lessened blood flow to their muscles, Mr. Tschakovsky says, the volunteers being massaged wound up with far less lactic acid removal than the groups who recovered passively or actively. Massage “actually impairs removal of lactic acid from exercised muscle,” Mr. Tschakovsky and his colleagues wrote in their published study.

Although the findings may seem counterintuitive (and, frankly, depressing), they actually are in agreement with a growing body of science about sports massage. Multiple other recent studies have found that massage tends to impede rather than improve blood flow to tired muscles. Mr. Tschakovsky’s experiment, however, directly correlates that impact with lactic-acid removal in the affected muscle.

Do his and the other scientists’ results mean that massage is worthless after exercise? “Not at all,” Mr. Tschakovsky says. “This experiment had a specific aim, to see whether massage improved blood flow and lactic-acid removal in an exercised muscle. It did not. That does not mean massage doesn’t have other beneficial effects. We just don’t necessarily know what they are yet.”

M. K. Brennan, a licensed massage and bodywork therapist registered nurse and former president of the American Massage Therapy Association, is more blunt. “Too many knowledgeable, experienced athletes rely on massage for there not to be a significant benefit,” she says. The psychological effects, for instance, may be extensive and pervasive, she says. A number of recent experiments have found that sports massage may reduce post-exercise blood concentrations of cortisol, a hormone associated with stress. In a particularly apropos study from 2000 of boxers, inter-bout massages left the athletes feeling significantly more recovered. The athletes didn’t subsequently punch any harder in their second bouts after a massage than after passive rest, but they felt less tired.

“The main takeaway” of Mr. Tschakovsky’s study, Ms. Brennan says, “is that far more research about exercise and sports massage is needed.”

Mr. Tschakovsky agrees. “Our study does not mean people should skip massages,” he says. “I’m not going to. And my wife, who runs marathons, looked at our results, laughed and said, ‘That’s very nice, Mike, but I’m getting a massage anyway.’ ”

Drive Out Your Confusion Over Buying A Car --- Courtesy: Yahoo! India News


Before breaking my head much over ideas for my first blog post here, the first thing that popped into my mind was the face of my friend, who has been unnecessarily worked up about buying a car. While talking to him in this regard, I realised that he is just one of many others who is feeling confused or anxious about buying a car. Guys, feelings such as these are a normal part of the car buying process. Take a deep breath and relax, here are some things that may help you make your choice easier.

1. Do you really need a car?

The first question you should ask yourself is why do you need a car right now. Isn’t it absurd to drive to work when almost every office provides employees with transportation facilities? (The trend now is cycling to work). Do you need a car for your regular shopping trip to a supermarket that is just two minutes away from home? When we travel long distances we mainly use buses or trains. Occasionally you can even hire a car. So why do you need a car? I’m not discouraging you, but think twice and convince yourself about the necessity for a car.

2. Should you buy a new or used car?

Now that you decided to go ahead with your plans to buy a car, another question arises: Used or a brand new car? Buying a used car is not better than nor is it worse than going for a brand new car. It’s just a choice of preference. For some a car is a status symbol, while for others it is simply a means of moving around. The former would choose brand new cars whereas the latter might prefer used ones. However, the challenge of buying a used car is evaluating the condition of the car and determining whether you are getting a fair deal or overpaying. You could make use of Auto Calculators that could help you decide which is right for you.

3. The perfect car does not exist

No matter how much you research, discuss or test-drive, trust me, you are not going to find the perfect car. And that is not your goal, too. All you are trying to do is find the best vehicle for your needs, budget and happiness. And that’s it. So keep it simple.

4. Re-examine your budget

Understanding your finances and getting a good price from the dealer is critical if you don’t want the car buying experience to leave a bitter taste in your mouth. If you are going to pay for the car in one lump sum, there’s not much to be anxious about. But most car buyers finance their purchase and make monthly installments and then the amount you spend on the car has a huge impact on your overall budget. Work out how much cash you practically have to spend after rent, bills, entertainment and other expenditure have been considered. There was a time when the average car loan was up to three years. Now five years is the standard and banks are even offering six years or more. This allows you to buy more expensive cars than you can really afford, by stretching the payments out until the car is almost fully depreciated. It’s always better to buy a car that you can afford to pay off in 48 months, or even better, 36 months.

5. This is not a do-or-die situation

It’s quite natural to feel restless about making a mistake, of buying the wrong car or spending too much money. However it may be that your anxiety is befogging your thinking. Remember, this is not a do-or-die situation. Nor is it a test – you are not being rated or ranked here. So I’m telling you again, relax!

Don't skip brain food - eat your breakfast -- Courtesy: IANS

Wed, Jun 2 10:15 AM



New Delhi, June 2 (IANS) Are you suffering from acidity, obesity or reduced attention span? Perhaps you are skipping breakfast, also called brain food and the most important meal of the day.

People in cities tend to give breakfast a miss perhaps due to hectic lifestyles or in the belief that it will keep them slim. But experts say it could end up making people obese.

'People do not seem to have time for breakfast these days. They have every reason to avoid the healthy tradition of having a good nutritious breakfast,' Anita Jatana, chief dietician at the Batra Hospital here, told IANS.

Describing it as a change in perception and lifestyle, she said: 'People usually do not eat because of their tight work schedules, late night dinners, zero figure obsession or just anything else that keeps them away from a healthy breakfast.'

According to the dieticians, breakfast is most essential. They say breakfast must be balanced and should include nutrients like calcium (milk or milk products), proteins and fibre (sprouts or cereal), and some amount of antioxidants (apples, strawberries, banana, oranges, etc) and vitamins.

'Often called 'brain food', breakfast needs to be wholesome and it should essentially contain all the vital nutrients that the body craves for,' Ritika Samadar, chief dietician at Max Hospital, told IANS.

A nutritious breakfast is necessary to keep the body's metabolism going properly.

'Generally, there is a gap of 10 to 12 hours between the dinner and breakfast and it is anyway very long for the body to resist.' In case, breakfast is skipped, 'we add some more hours, hence affecting the body's metabolism', Samadar said.

Jatana feels long gaps between meals can also cause digestion problems. 'Not eating on time leads to a lot of ailments. Obesity, acidity, reduced attention span and ulceration are a few on the list.'

Owing a great deal to Kareena Kapoor's size zero, people have become obsessed with ultra thin figures and they feel not eating will help lose weight. But experts say it is the beginning of many problems.

'People think that if they skip breakfast, they will lose weight. But it is a myth. They gain weight at a faster rate instead because they end up eating more than in the normal course,' said Priti Vijay, head dietician at Max Hospital, Saket.

'In the long run, if more meals are skipped in a day than just the breakfast, it can also lead to shrinking of the stomach and intestines,' Jatana said.

The ideal time for breakfast is between 8 a.m. and 10 a.m. Any delay results in weight gain.

'Half of overweight patients have a tendency to skip breakfast,' said Vijay. 'Some 60 to 70 percent patients who come to me with digestion or stomach-related problems or for advice on weight gain disclose that they frequently miss their breakfast.'

Perhaps it is time to take an old proverb seriously - 'Eat breakfast like a king, lunch like a prince, and dinner like a pauper'.

(Megha Mishra can be contacted at mishra.megha09@gmail.com)

Banker sues Citigroup after she was fired for being 'too hot'! -- Courtesy: ANI

Thu, Jun 3 12:25 PM



New York, June 3 (ANI): A female employee of Citibank was apparently fired from her job because her male colleagues found her 'too distracting'.

Debrahlee Lorenzana said that despite her turnout being professional, her male bosses and co-workers still found her too hot be around their cold cash.

"Shortly after the commencement of her employment, branch manager Craig Fisher and assistant branch manager Peter Claibourne began articulating inappropriate and sexist comments concerning plaintiff's clothing and appearance," The New York Post quoted her court filings as saying.

"The improper comments made to plaintiff by Fisher and Claibourne included, but were not limited to, advising her that she must refrain from wearing certain items of clothing, in particular, turtleneck tops, pencil skirts, fitted business suits, or other properly tailored clothing.

"In blatantly discriminatory fashion, plaintiff was advised that as a result of the shape of her figure, such clothes were purportedly 'too distracting' for her male colleagues and supervisors to bear."

The filing also read, "In a regressive response more suitable for reality television than a white-shoe corporation in the 21st century, plaintiff was advised that these other comparator females may wear what they like, as their general unattractiveness rendered moot their sartorial choices, unlike plaintiff, whose shapeliness could not be heightened by beautifully tailored clothing."

After rejecting a complaint and an application to be transferred, she was eventually moved to a new branch, she was reprimanded for failing to recruit new customers.

"The purported reasons for plaintiff's termination included that she failed to meet the required new account opening quotas, in addition to the credulity-straining assertion that her clothing choices were 'inappropriate,'" the suit said.

"Are you saying that just because I look this way genetically, that this should be a curse for me?" she told the Village Voice, which first reported her case.

In a statement, Citibank said, "We believe this lawsuit is without merit and we will defend against it vigorously."

Citibank has not commented for reasons of employee privacy but added that the bank has "a strong commitment to diversity and we do not condone, or tolerate, discrimination within our business for any reason." (ANI)

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

Speed of your smile can influence people's first impressions of you --- Courtesy: ANI

Mon, May 31 11:10 AM

 


London, May 31 (ANI): The speed of your smile can shape the first impressions others have of you, according to a new research.

Smiling too quickly can lead others to think that you are insincere, while slow grins appear more genuine.

As part of the research, a team of business advisors examined how smiling can give clients a positive impression.

They discovered that a smile, which appears too swiftly and does not extend to the eyes can sends signals that you lack sincerity.

They found that people should avoid three types of grin:

The Enthusiast - A huge smile showing all of your teeth and wide eyes can be overbearing.

The Big Freeze - A constant, practiced smile that lacks sincerity.

The Robot - A tiny, polite smile that doesn't display warmth.

"Studies show people perceive a slower, natural smile which floods the entire face to be more genuine," the Sun quoted Lesley Meechan of the Glasgow-based Go Group as saying.

Psychologist Bridget Hanna added: "Smiling all the time appears over-pleasing and lowers your status."

26/11: Indian investigators in US to question Headley ---- Courtesy: PTI

Tue, Jun 1 09:26 AM

 


A team of Indian investigators arrived in the US on Tuesday to interrogate for the first time David Coleman Headley, accused of helping Lashkar-e-Taiba terrorists carry out the 26/11 Mumbai attacks.

The team comprises officers of the National Investigation Agency and a law officer. This will be for the first time that 49-year-old Pakistani-American Headley will be facing direct questions from Indian investigators since his arrest in October last year.

Besides the Indian team, those expected to be present during the questioning would be Headley's lawyer and an officer of the FBI.

The questioning of Headley, currently being held in the federal lock-up Metropolitan Correctional Centre in Chicago, is going to revolve around the places he had visited after the Mumbai terror attacks and the people he had remained in touch with during his stay in India.

Sources in India said the four-member team has prepared questions about his stay in the country especially during March 2009, his last visit to India.

The travel details of Headley, the globe-trotting prized asset of the LeT, are being sought mainly as investigators believe that this visit may have been to finalise the synchronised terror strikes on Jewish houses located in five cities, the sources said.

They said the government has kept 'backup staff' in readiness if the team needed any assistance.

The statement of Headley would be recorded by the Special Law Officer of India after which the NIA, which has registered a case against Headley and Pakistani-Canadian national Tahawwur Rana for waging war against the country and Unlawful Activities Prevention (Act), may file a chargesheet against him.

Headley, a Chicago-based American with roots in Pakistan, has already confessed to have conducted several reccees as part of the planning for the ghastly attacks that killed 166 people in the country's financial capital in November 2008.

After being arrested in October last year, the 49-year old entered into a plea bargain with the US government in March this year, wherein he offered to be available to foreign investigators through deposition, video conferencing or letters rogatory.

However, further details like for how many hours or days the Indian team would get access to Headley, were not yet given.

Headley's lawyer John Theis said last week he would not comment on any specific details of such an access and "would not be able to share specific information at this point" as to when and for how long the team from India can question Headley.

The team has been sent following a communication from the US Justice Department that all concerned officials and the lawyer of Headley will be available during their visit to facilitate their access to Headley.

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Quitting Facebook next week? - Courtesy: India Today

Tue, May 25 04:00 PM



The world's biggest social networking site Facebook faces a unique challenge next week when it will possibly get its 500 millionth user worldwide and India may get its 10 millionth Facebook account holder.

Soon after though, on May 31, hundreds of thousands of these folks are expected to quit their Facebook accounts. Not freeze, not suspend, just quit.

These folks may resort to that extreme step because they are angry with Mark Zuckerberg – Facebook's founder and CEO - and his merry band of privacy invaders. Some say Facebook deserves the quitters - it has been acting like an inveterate Web bully who steals your school lunch and then complains to your mother that there wasn't enough to eat.

This is what Facebook has done, according to the Electronic Privacy Information Center, a Washington-based advocacy group: "Facebook now discloses personal information to the public that Facebook users previously restricted. Facebook now discloses personal information to third parties that Facebook users previously did not make available. These changes violate user expectations, diminish user privacy, and contradict Facebook's own representations." These allegations coincide with Facebook making several changes to its privacy settings on April 22 this year. In fact, users were shocked to see 50 different settings with 170 options easily making it the most complicated privacy settings form on the Web.

Ridiculous as these settings are, it drove millions of users to madness, if they weren't already rendered insane by the stupidity of Farmville and the absurdity of the hundreds of other games and apps that Facebook keeps encouraging you to play or share.

SO much is the furore online against Facebook that it is thinking of rejigging its privacy settings again. But would that be too little, too late? When Zuckerberg made the announcement regarding the new privacy settings, he said: "We think that the future of the web will be filled with personalised experiences.

We've worked with three pre-selected partners - Microsoft Docs, Yelp and Pandora - to give you a glimpse of this future, which you can access without having to login again or click to connect." What he forgot to mention is something that EPIC picked up and mentioned in its complaint to the Federal Trade Commission in the US along with 14 other groups. "Facebook has essentially forced many Facebook users to reveal personal profile information that they did not intend to make public," EPIC said.

A site called quitfacebook. com has been set up where users can pledge that they will delete their Facebook accounts on May 31.

Another site facebookprotest. com is doing something similar, but has asked that boycott day to be June 6.

The issue is more than just privacy; the Facebook case could define what information is made public in the future and what is not. It is, without exaggeration, our personal freedoms that are at stake here. With thousands of people opposed to Facebook's new privacy settings, it might well make it more "user-friendly". The only fear, however, is that it may remain so until the next change in settings.

The World's Highest Hotel - Courtesy: Forbes.com

Tue, May 25 02:34 PM



Hana R. Alberts, Forbes.com

At street level Hong Kong is a teeming cacophony. Double-decker buses weave around bicyclists toting chunks of meat from market butchers, while narrow sidewalks, inconvenient crosswalks and crowded luxury shops make walking a task best suited for the nimble and patient. But 1,600 feet above the hoi-polloi, the city seems different. It's bustling but serene, with boats criss-crossing the harbor against the topography of the glittering skyline, and green mountains rising up behind it all.

That's the view from the new Ritz-Carlton Hong Kong. When completed, it will be the highest hotel in the world. Set to open in December, it occupies the top floors of the International Commerce Centre, a skyscraper that is home to financial giants like Morgan Stanley, Credit Suisse and Deutsche Bank.

It won't open until December, but Forbes got a sneak preview.

Unsurprisingly, one of the Ritz-Carlton Hong Kong's best amenities is the view. One hundred eighteen floors above the city's jam-packed roads, in one of the 312 guest rooms, even those double-decker buses look tiny. The panorama extends across the waterways of the South China Sea, teeming with signs of busy ports and international trade.

Where there are now bamboo scaffolding and concrete, guests will find several trendy restaurants with vast windows and high ceilings, an indoor infinity pool and a rooftop bar. The design as depicted in renderings will be varied but classic; the vibe bright and airy in some parts of the hotel and soft and romantic in others.

When it opens, the Ritz-Carlton will best the Park Hyatt Shanghai, which currently holds the world's-highest-hotel honor. The Park Hyatt occupies the 79th to 93rd floors of Shanghai's tallest building, the towering, bottle-opener-shaped World Financial Center. Luxuriously equipped with a tai chi courtyard and a spa, the hotel is located east of the city's Huangpu River, in the rapidly developing district of Pudong.

Other tall hotels dot the Asia-Pacific region, and there are a handful in Europe and North America. But the place with the highest concentration of skyscraper hotels is Dubai. The Middle East's capital of leisure and finance boasts the Armani Hotel Dubai, the Rose Rayhaan and the Burj Al Arab. The first, in the Burj Khalifa tower, is fashion designer Georgio Armani's first hotel. The hotel, though, only occupies lower floors of the 160-level structure. Standing at 1,093 feet, the blossom-shaped Rose Rayhaan is the flagship property of an alcohol-free company, so it caters to families and business travelers.

The most luxurious, the Burj al Arab, is located on its own man-made island. Visitors can arrive in style--either by helicopter or in the back of a Rolls Royce limousine. A brigade of butlers services the 202 duplex suites, in which guests can choose from 13 different pillows and quilts.

Global business and pleasure travel--and thus hotel revenues--took a hit during the recession. But Asia is on the go again, and the Ritz has taken notice. Of the visitors to the brand's Asian hotels, 70% hail from within the region. Of those, 60% are Chinese.

"The Chinese are traveling more everywhere," says the Ritz-Carlton Hong Kong general manager Mark DeCocinis. "Their influence will be very important to us."

While the group boasted only one hotel in greater China as late as 2006, by the end of this year it will have eight. Ritz-Carlton has staffed Chinese speakers at its hotels in New York, San Francisco and Barcelona, DeCocinis says, and there will be a focus on providing food and amenities in Hong Kong that suit their expectations.

The Ritz's sheer height may beat its rivals in Shanghai and Dubai, but DeCocinis says service is his focus--not superlatives.

"This is what brings people back. It's the tallest hotel, spectacular views that we have here, but it's also an incredible product, and service, and facilities," DeCocinis, a 21-year Ritz-Carlton veteran, says. "We're not going to allow the views to take care of our guests."

Diamonds travel at 60 km per hour inside Earth - Courtesy: ANI

Monday, May 24, 2010, 6:11 [IST]



London, May 24 (ANI) Diamond infused magma travel to the surface of the earth from deep within the planet at a blistering 60 kilometres per hour.

It was known that kimberlite, which often contains diamonds, can rise more quickly near the surface, but its speed at great depths was unclear.

And now, Masayuki Nishi and colleagues at Kyushu University in Fukuoka, Japan, have used the mineral garnet as a speedometer.

Garnet inclusions that form inside diamond are stable at depths of between 400 and 700 kilometres, but partially degrade at lower pressures and temperatures.

The researchers synthesised garnet in heated, pressurised containers and measured how fast it degraded as the temperature and pressure were lowered, simulating ascent through Earth's mantle.

And the rate of decay suggested that for a garnet-infused diamond to reach the surface it must take between hours and days to travel from a depth of 400 km.

A rapid ascent mechanism may exist at greater depths than ever thought, New Scientist quoted Nishi as saying.

The study was published in Geophysical Research Letters. (ANI)

Addicted to Twitter? - Courtesy: HindustanTimes.com

Sat, May 22 09:05 AM



New Delhi, May 21 -- To say that Twitter's popularity has taken an all-new dimension with people spending their whole day over tweeting won't be an exaggeration. But what if online social-networking starts taking a toll on your actual social life?

Filmmaker Karan Johar admits, "I am obsessed with Twitter. Twitter has become my spouse as I can share every emotion that I want to with the people on it. And going by my fixation, I can say that I might need help to overcome it in future." Singer Lily Allen has branded the site as "very addictive and dangerous". "Anything which is done in extreme can be addictive.

There has been an increase in complaints by parents about childs' obsession with social networking especially on Twitter. One of the parents came during their daughter's board exams saying that she wasted an hour every day Twitter and Facebook," says Dr Aarti Anand, consulting clinical psychologist, Sir Ganga Ram Hospital.

"The need for people to be connected with others and the high that one gets with knowing that so many people are reading what I tweet has people hooked on to Twitter. The celebrity presence adds to the damage. And the easy access through mobiles and through applications (like tweetdeck) on the iPhone and Blackberry makes matters worse," says Dr Amitabha Saha, senior consultant, psychiatry, Brainex.

Check for addiction Constantly feels the need to check Twitter and it hampers your day-to-day activities and productivity.

Keep refreshing the twitter page or checking your cell phone every now and then for new tweets. Have more Twitter followers than friends in real life. Avoid addiction Make some real friends. Schedule a specific time to 'be active' on Twitter.

Black box of crashed Air India plane found - Courtesy: Reuters

Tue, May 25 11:36 AM



A black box recorder has been recovered from an Air India Express Boeing 737-800 aircraft that crashed in Mangalore last week, killing 158 people on board, an official said on Tuesday.

The cause of the worst air disaster in India in more than a decade was still unknown, said officials.

"Yes, the black box has been found," Peter Abraham, director at the Mangalore airport, told Reuters.

The Air India Express aircraft, a budget carrier owned by state-run Air India and carrying 166 people and crew, crashed early on Saturday while landing at Mangalore city's "table-top" airport which overlooks a ravine.

Eight people survived, mostly by jumping out of the plane that broke into two after crashing.

While the cause of the crash has not been established, India's media and some aviation experts have said the runway at Mangalore was not wide or long enough and may have given little room for the pilot to react after landing.

Civil Aviation Minister Praful Patel has said the runway should not be blamed for the crash, adding the Mangalore crash should be seen as an isolated incident.

India has had several near misses in the past few years, underscoring aviation safety issues. (Reporting by Anil D'Silva; Writing by Rajesh Kumar Singh; Editing by Paul de Bendern and Michael Perry)

'Quantum dot' promises super-fast, super-powerful computing - Courtesy:ANI

Mon, May 24 02:25 PM



Melbourne, May 24 (ANI): Australian scientists have developed a new transistor in a computer chip that is 10 times smaller than those currently in use.

The invention marks the start of a new age of super-fast, super-powerful computing, has been described in the journal Nature Nanotechnology.

At the heart of the electronic device lies a "quantum dot", measuring four-billionths of a metre - so small that it contains only seven atoms, compared to the millions that usually make up a laptop chip.

"We're basically controlling nature at the atomic scale," The Age quoted study co-author, Michelle Simmons, director of the University of New South Wales centre of excellence for quantum computer technology, as saying.

She added: "This is one of the key milestones in building a quantum computer."

According to Prof. Simmons, devices made at this scale would allow more complex computations at much greater speeds.

Their use would also improve database searching and eventually lead to "100 percent secure communication".

Prof. Simmons said: "It has many implications for national security and for the financial system and transferring information of any kind."

Explaining the reason for using silicon, she said: "All our computers contain silicon chips.

"Building transistors at the atomic-scale means that anything electrical like computers and mobile phones will get smaller and faster while their functionality increases dramatically." (ANI)

Don't bet on low prices - Courtesy: India Today

Mon, May 24 12:46 PM



Is there respite from inflation? Don't depend on predictions, just be prepared. Plan your finances by calculating its impact on your goals.

The weatherman has company. He is no longer the only one to be ridiculed for inaccurate forecasts - inflation experts have joined the ranks. It is not surprising given that the weather forecast has a deep impact on inflation prediction.

Even the Reserve Bank of India cannot say which way the wind will blow, literally. Its recent prediction of 5.5 per cent inflation by next March comes with a qualifier - normal monsoon.

Unfortunately, the capricious winds have no regard for the weatherman or economic experts. Compare the first monsoon forecast of 2009 with the end-of-the-season report and you will know why. The monsoon prediction for this year sounds ominously similar, with a mere two per cent difference in expectation offering optimism. So, irrespective of how meticulous the calculation, the inflation rate for the next few months is anybody's guess.

Why the fuss about the precision of forecasters?

It is obvious -each weekend trip to the market leaves you with fatter grocery bills, and not because you are consuming more.

According to the RBI's Inflation Expectation Survey of Households conducted in March this year, 70.4 per cent of the 4,000 respondents expected food prices to increase in the ensuing three months at a pace higher than the rate of inflation in March.

The WPI figures for April corresponded to this view. While fruits and vegetables became costlier by 6.16 per cent, the prices of pulses and cereals increased by 11.93 per cent and those of eggs, meat and fish by a staggering 32.24 per cent.

It is not just your budget that bleeds because of incorrect inflation assumptions. The impact on your goals is worse.

Let's assume you are saving to buy a car after three years; it is worth Rs 5 lakh now. While calculating how much to salt away every month, you assume the annual inflation to be five per cent and your investments to grow by 12 per cent every year.

Suppose, however, that the car firm decides to jack up prices by eight per cent a year due to a spurt in the cost of steel. So, though you have saved diligently, your corpus will fall short of the target by about Rs 51,000 (Rs 6.29-5.78 lakh).

Extend this logic to other aspects of your life, such as retirement nest egg, child's education, etc, and you realise why it is important that the inflation forecasters get their numbers right.

Unfortunately, monsoon is not the only unpredictable parameter that they have to grapple with. Global commodity prices, especially oil, can also spring nasty surprises. Crude oil hit a high of $88.94 per barrel between January and April 2010.

Steel prices are also rising - they shot up by 17.8 per cent between January and April 2010. This may upset the positive impact of the bumper rabi crop on stabilising food inflation, which registered only a small increase from 16.65 per cent in March to 16.87 per cent in April.

However, the long period of high food prices has already done some damage. "Due to sustained food inflation, wages and general industrial costs rise.As there was a demand slump, the industry did not have the pricing power to pass on the increase in costs to consumers. The situation has changed with the economic recovery. This is why inflation is becoming broad-based," says Ashima Goyal, professor at the Indira Gandhi Institute of Development Research.

The RBI's decision to increase the cash reserve ratio by 25 basis points is expected to contain the spillover by sucking out liquidity from the system. However, as officials at the central bank say, "Associated structural issues also need to be addressed to attend to the problem in the medium term."

Does this mean no one can accurately predict inflation for the next few months? Yes. You will find many an expert making tall claims using his private crystal ball. But such claims are futile if they are conditional.

Low inflation hanging by several 'ifs' is hardly a prediction and is not useful to investors. So how do you incorporate headline inflation in your financial plan? By ignoring it. Don't predict, just prepare for inflation.

You won't lose out on much. The Wholesale Price Index (WPI) does not reflect the real price rise faced by urbanites as their consumption pattern is different from the basket of items and weightages used to calculate the WPI. It is like analysing the weather in Shimla to predict rainfall in Delhi simply because the two places are geographically close.

Even the Consumer Price Index, which is aligned more to the urban consumer's spending, does not replicate it entirely. For example, it does not factor in the rise in prices of services, which contribute sizeably to your monthly household bills.

Swapnil Pawar, head of HNI Solutions, Karvy, suggests, "For goals that are about five years away, investors should calculate the future costs individually. For instance, the cost of education is likely to surge faster than headline inflation. On the other hand, marriage expenses will not increase much in this time frame."

If you use inflation assumptions as per the trends in specific sectors, you need not panic during phases of high headline inflation as it will be irrelevant to your plan.

Most experts think that in the long term, an assumption of six per cent annual inflation will keep you on the right track for achieving your goals.

Reproduced From Mail Today. Copyright 2010. All rights reserved.

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

'Viagra' for women to hit the shelves soon ------ Courtesy: ANI

Mon, May 24 01:25 PM



Washington, May 24 (ANI): Good news for women who want to perk up the action in their bedroom-the Food and Drug Administration committee is thinking of endorsing the first pill designed to do for women what Viagra does for men-boost their sex lives.

A German pharmaceutical giant wants to sell a drug with the decidedly unsexy name "flibanserin," which has shown prowess for sparking a woman's sexual desire by fiddling with her brain chemicals.

The FDA's Reproductive Health Drugs Advisory Committee will meet on June 18 to consider the request.

But the prospect of the drug's approval has already triggered debate over whether the medication, like others in the pipeline, represents a long-sought step toward equity for women's health or the latest example of the pharmaceutical industry fabricating a questionable disorder to sell unnecessary and potentially dangerous drugs.

"Achieving a happy and healthy sex life can be a real and important problem for some women. But we have lots of questions about the 'pink Viagra,'" the Washington Post quoted Amy Allina of the National Women's Health Network, a Washington-based advocacy group, as saying.

Viagra's catapult to blockbuster status after its 1998 approval set off a flurry of interest in me-too medications for women.

However, drugmaker Pfizer's hopes that its "little blue pill" would also ignite female libido fizzled, making it clear that a woman's sexuality is more complicated than a man's.

But, Germany's Boehringer Ingelheim is optimistic that flibanserin is on the verge of becoming the first prescription medication to tap what some have estimated could be a 2 billion dollar market in the United States alone.

"We believe women deserve options and we're hoping flibanserin may represent a safe and effective option for many women," said Michael Sand, who heads the company's clinical research on flibanserin.

Scientists found that flibanserin, developed as an antidepressant, was ineffective for treatment of depression.

But the drug appeared to produce an unexpected side effect: boosting women's libido.

This prompted the company to study it for hypoactive sexual desire disorder, or HSDD, an otherwise unexplained loss of sexual thoughts, fantasies and desire that can cause significant emotional distress.

Some research suggests 10 percent of women may suffer from HSDD.

"It's not that they are averse to sex. It's just that they don't care about it. They just stop thinking about it. It's like a switch has been flipped. It's a loss for them. They miss it. And they want it back," said Anita H. Clayton, a professor of psychiatry and neurobehavioral sciences at the University of Virginia who has studied the drug for the company. (ANI)

Passive income and wealth creation strategies --------- Source: iTrust.in

Monday May 24



Ever wondered how your colleague at work, who earns the same salary as you, has bought a BMW while you are still driving your 5-year-old Honda City?

Chances are your colleague has utilized his or her existing salary smartly to generate passive sources of income, on the back of which the car has been bought. By generating passive income you can achieve financial freedom and flexibility through the creation of alternative sources of income that can complement your salary income. People rarely achieve their financial goals and dreams only on the back of their salaries - one needs alternative sources of income that can increase one's wealth and consumption capabilities. Here we share with you some tips on how to generate passive income that can facilitate wealth creation.

What is passive income?

The salary you get from work is a direct result of your efforts at work, during your active working life. Passive income, on the other hand, is income that you can generate without having to directly work for it.

For instance, if you invest a part of your salary into instruments that will earn income for you without you spending any time on it, you can create passive sources of investment income for yourself. Apart from the act of investment, you are not directly doing any active work to generate investment income. In effect, your money works for you to earn more money for no incremental effort on your part. Over time, if you have invested smartly, you can have enough money through these passive sources to make a down payment on an apartment or buy that dream car.

Even if you start small, the idea is that you should start creating passive income for your self. Through the sheer power of compounding of capital, small savings today can grow into a large amount within just a short period of 4-5 years.

When can I start earning passive income?

You can start as early as today! All you need is a regular source of salary income and the discipline of setting aside a part of this salary, even if it is a small amount, towards investment purposes before you start spending your money on your lifestyle or your living costs.

This of course might not always be easy, and depends upon the state of your personal finances and your family situation. Also, if you are just starting out your career, you might not have the flexibility to invest immediately. To add to these is the peer pressure to spend money on items of conspicuous consumption like the latest mobile phone or a cutting edge flat screen LCD TV. The choice whether to invest or not is of course yours, but please bear in mind the tradeoff in the long term - you can either consume today, or save up to consume for later.

If, however, you are in your middle age, you might not be left with much of a choice and your key goal should be to use as much of your income as possible from your remaining peak earning years to create a source of passive income, which is often the only source of funds for most people during retirement.

What is the tax impact of passive income?

Like your salary income, any passive income that you generate will also create a tax liability for you.

Depending upon the source of the income there might be different tax treatment applied. For instance, dividends from equity instruments such as stocks or equity mutual funds are tax free in the hands of the investor. However, dividends distributed by a debt or a liquid fund will be subject to a dividend distribution tax paid out by the fund.

Further, the tax treatment also depends upon the time duration that you hold an asset or an investment. If you make a gain on a capital market investment, but hold it for less than 12 months, short-term capital gains tax rules will apply. If you hold the investment for more than 12 months then long-term capital gains tax rates will be applicable. Similarly, for property the holding period that determines a short or long-term capital gain is whether you have owned the asset for more or less than 3 years. The tax rates for capital gains vary by the type of investment in question. Sometimes you might also be able to use losses from your investments to offset your taxes from other sources of income.

Whatever be the source of your passive income, you will need to declare it in your annual tax return, and pay taxes on it according to the existing tax rates and rules.

By www.iTrust.in - India's leading one-stop financial supermarket for real estate, home loans, investments, taxes and financial planning.

Monday, May 24, 2010

Allowing women to be guardians: Panel examines bill

Sun, May 23 12:20 PM



New Delhi, May 23 (IANS) A parliamentary panel is scrutinising a bill aimed at giving Indian women equal rights as men in adopting children and becoming guardians of minors, including their own kids - something they are barred from under existing law.

The Personal Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2010 seeks to entitle women to equal rights as men on the issue of guardianship of minor children by removing a gender-discriminatory clause from a law of 1890 vintage - the Guardians and Wards Act. The bill, which also seeks to amend the Hindu Adoptions and Maintenance Act, 1956, was introduced in the Rajya Sabha April 22 by Law and Justice Minister M. Veerappa Moily.

As the first step to examine the proposed legislation, the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Ministry of Law and Justice, headed by senior Congress leader and Rajya Sabha member Jayanthi Natarajan, has solicited public opinion on the bill. Public views and opinion were sought by the Rajya Sabha secretariat last week. These have to be submitted by the month end. The house had referred the bill to the parliamentary panel for scrutiny and fine tuning.

The bill seeks to amend the Guardians and Wards Act to entitle a minor's mother, besides the father, to be appointed as his or her guardian. The current provisions of the law authorise courts to appoint either the father or any other person, in case the father is not alive or not fit, as the guardian of a minor child.

The statement of objects and reasons of the bill explains that the amendment will 'include the mother along with the father as a fit person to be appointed as guardian so that courts shall not appoint any other person as a guardian of a minor if either of the parents is fit to be the guardian of such minor.'

This amendment is being made under a recommendation in the 83rd report of the Law Commission of India, the bill explained.

Similarly, the bill seeks to amend sections 8 and 9 of the Hindu Adoptions and Maintenance Act to give women equal rights as men in matters of adopting children or giving her children in adoption to others.

The bill entitles any major Hindu woman of sound mind to adopt a son or daughter.

However, if married, she will have to take the consent of her husband for adopting the children, 'unless the husband has completely and finally renounced the world or has ceased to be a Hindu or has been declared by a court of competent jurisdiction to be of unsound mind', says the bill.

The bill also seeks to entitle the mother 'to give her child in adoption if the father is dead or has completely and finally renounced the world or has ceased to be a Hindu or has been declared by a court of competent jurisdiction to be of unsound mind.'

The present provision of the law entitles only men to adopt children, give them in adoption, albeit in consultation with their living wife and not vice versa.

Explaining the reasons behind seeking to change the law, the bill says: 'As per the census held in 2001, the female population in India constitutes about 48.26 percent of the total population.'

'The empowerment of women by various legislative as well as other measures is an avowed policy of the government and bringing complete equality for them in all spheres of life is a matter of utmost concern,' the statement said.

It added that while 'the constitution of India guarantees equality of status and equality of opportunity to all citizens, irrespective of the fact whether they are men and women, there is also a growing demand for making laws free from gender bias and to provide legal equality to women in all spheres of life.'

(Courtesy: IANS)

TV has more women viewers than men

Sun, May 23 09:35 AM



New Delhi, May 23 (PTI) Television is the most preferred entertainment medium and women have established their supremacy over men in living rooms, a media study has found. TV sealed the first slot with as many as 92 per cent of respondents voting for it in a survey conducted by commercial consultancy firm Deloitte on ''State of the Media Democracy Survey,''.

Among 2,000 respondents across the country, women were found to be watching more TV programmes (93 per cent), compared to men (91 per cent). Analysing the reason behind TV''s sway among respondents from cities like Bangalore, Lucknow, Ludhiana, Surat and Indore, the study said, "this may be because TV has a wider reach than any other medium and the ''visuals'' have a greater impact irrespective of their educational background, status etc."

It further said "in India, the growth of the DTH platform has ensured that the remotest corner of the country can now get hooked onto numerous soaps, sports, news and other powerful visuals that modern day television beams out". Even the senior citizens rate TV as the preferred entertainment medium, with their score being as high as 95 per cent.

Newspaper occupies the second position. "Indians, unlike the westerners, want to read dailies with their morning cup of tea. This reading habit is more visible in the younger bracket of respondents (those above 26 years), with 68 per cent of them preferring newspaper. Among the younger generations, going to the movies, listening to music and radio are high on their next preferred entertainment areas.

The tech-savvy generation is more inclined to Internet, gaming and cell phones as means of recreation," the survey said. Cell phone came out as the most preferred entertainment device as 64 per cent of the respondents falling in the age group of 14-25 voted for it.

(Courtesy: PTI)

Educated, unemployable

Sunday May 23, 02:54 AM Source: Indian Express Finance



A yawning gap

Why must Infosys (INFOSYS.BO : 2613.15 +27), one of the biggest names in the IT industry, which recruits the cr me-de-le-cr me of professionals from the best institutes in the country, spend $184 million on training programmes annually or invest up to 30 weeks of residential programmes on engineers it hires? The answer is simple the need to build employee competency levels. Says Srikantan Moorthy, VP and head, education & research, Infosys Technologies, "We recruit people on the basis of their learning ability. The investment is a non-negotiable. Besides training we conduct residential programmes to enable our engineers to meet client requirements. The need of the hour is not just for individuals to have strong conceptual knowledge, but also strong application capabilities." His information is, perhaps, an indicator of how inadequate India's education system is when it comes to preparing an individual for a job.

While unemployment cannot be brushed under the carpet, youth employability is no less a nightmare. A lot can be blamed on the education system. As many as 90% employment opportunities require vocational skills, but 90% of our college and school outputs are just cram experts, rendering no less than 57% of India's youth suffering with some degree of unemployability, reveals a recent TeamLease Labour report.

So, if you were looking at the bright side of the picture that just 8% of the youth in India are unemployed, there's hardly a reason to cheer, because 53% of the rest suffer from some form of skill deprivation. That sets back the demographic advantage India could hope to enjoy in future.

"India is coming into its dividend as an unusually young country in an unusually ageing market a young, fresh-faced nation in a graying world," Nandan Nilekani observed in his book, Imagining India: Ideas for the New Century. That's not just another observation. By 2025, 25% of the world's workers will be Indians, points out the TeamLease report. Three hundred and fifty universities, 18,000 colleges and 6,000 ITIs will till then continue to churn out five lakh technical graduates, along with around 2.3 million graduates (or maybe more). Unfortunately, just 10-25% of them will be 'employable', according to the Confederation of Indian Industry (CII).

If that to you seems far fetched, consider this: according to a 2008 report of the Boston Study Group, India by 2012 will have 1.3 million surplus of un-trained and under-educated people and the country will fall short (by 5.3 million) of real talent.

An inefficient human resource development regime in the country, absence of an academia-industry interface, lack of focus on skill development of individuals and an almost non-existent quality assurance framework are the root causes of the poor outcomes of the current educational regime. With no returns expected in terms of jobs, there is a significant drop-out rate leading to an under-trained and under-skilled workforce.

"I opted to work right after graduation as I could see how my seniors were struggling to find a job of their choice and had to make peace with jobs that were underpaying and not worth their efforts," rues 23-year-old Jitesh Bhasin, a BPO employee. His fears are not unjustified.

This trend will result in a deluge of 'shall drop, will work' accumulating at the bottom of the education pyramid. The NSS' 61st round employment data hardly sprung up a surprise when it revealed that in urban India, 207 out of every 1,000 men who completed their graduation or went beyond that remained unemployed, against only 10 men out of a 1,000 who are not literate.

Skill deficit

Consensus on the lack of vocational training in the country impeding competitiveness and productivity of the workforce is easy to achieve among experts. How else do you interpret that only 25% of the engineering graduates, 15% of finance and accounting professionals and just 10% of professionals with any kind of degree are suitable to be employed in MNCs. Incidentally, that finding comes from an MNC itself (McKinsey).

India better pull up its socks. Close to 500 million people, says McKinsey, will need to go through skill development by 2020. As Dilip Chenoy, CEO, National Skills Development Council, says, "It's not education that is primarily responsible for lack of skills. It's probably the lack of systematic approach in skill development and building on whatever education one receives."

The 11th Plan document suggests that due to "the near exclusive reliance upon a few training courses with long duration (two to three years) covering around 100 skills, 80% of new entrants into the workforce have no opportunity for training in skills. 12.8 million population (sic) will enter the work force as new entrants per year. As against this, the present (largely government-administered) system of delivery can only provide training to 3.1 million per year".

The manner in which higher education institutes have grown in the past decade facing difficulty in attracting top-notch faculty, retaining them, and enhancing their skills is worrisome. "Quality has suffered a lot with this expansion," says Amit Bansal, CEO and founder of PurpleLeap, an Educomp-Pearson company that is into entry-level talent management. Many of them, therefore, do not have the ability to attract the best students. "It is the increasing number of students coming out of the neo- and non-academic managed colleges that contribute to non-employability or under- employability," says Srinivasan. With the dilution of entrance standards, the overall education quality is being compromised. K Pandia Rajan, MD, Ma Foi Management Consultants, adds how the academic infrastructure in engineering colleges has become very basic. "A quantum leap in engineering colleges due to poor accreditation policies is a big problem," he says.

Another area of focus is lack of soft skills. Shankar Srinivasan, chief people officer, Cognizant, feels that often students coming out of Indian institutes are technically proficient. "But they lack behavioural prerequisites such as communication, presentation, confidence and other soft skills," he says. Whether the reforms initiated by the government in terms of PPP model being adopted for upgrading ITIs and a modular employable skills programme with an objective to provide employable skills to early school leavers, existing workers and even ITI graduates works remains to be seen.

Undeniably, the need of the hour is to implement a skill-based education system in place of the degree-based system to sincerely solve the problem of educated unemployment.

Staying away from sun causes depression: Study

Sun, May 23 02:03 AM



London, May 23 (IANS) Hiding away from sun rays to protect oneself from skin diseases can harm one's health in many other ways, says an expert.

A study published in the British Medical Journal (BMJ) has revealed that applying sun screen can contribute to Vitamin D deficiency. Though it is vital to protect our skin from harmful radiations, experts fear some people are taking it too far, reports themirror.co.uk.

According to the study led by professors Simon Pearce and Time Cheetham, people are getting far too little sun exposure, which the body needs to produce Vitamin D. Staying out of the sun altogether can cause bone problems, and in extreme cases rickets and osteoporosis, depression and even weight gain.

However, the study does not suggest that one should not apply sun screens and let skin burn but to keep in mind that small doses of unprotected sun exposure are vital.

According to experts, we need about 20 minutes of sunlight a day to help bodies produce enough vitamin D, known as the 'sunshine vitamin'.

(Courtesy: IANS)

50 paise on its way to the oblivion?

Sun, May 23 12:13 PM



New Delhi, May 23 (PTI) The fifty paise coins may soon be thing of the past as there are few takers for them, despite they being a legal tender.

From small retailers, auto drivers, bus conductors, grocers to customers, everyone seems to be blocking the circulation of 50 paise. But if we go by the rule book, it seems that they are doing it out of ignorance or just for convenience.

They give a volley of reasons to justify their reluctance in accept the coin. "The government should publicise and communicate that the coins are still in use, then only shopkeepers and customers would circulate the coins," says Harminder Kaur, a confectionery owner at the Super Bazaar in the heart of the Capital.

What more, there is an online community to drive the no-50-paise-please gang! Recently a group of young people have launched a Facebook community titled "I hate when somebody gives me 50 paise as change!"

Some others who are still in the brick-and-mortar age, say since the coin has no value, people don't mind paying the extra. And it seems that they have a point in this age of skyrocketing prices as practically a 50 paise coin would get you nothing now, barring perhaps some cheap toffees for kids.

"50 paise does not matter to the rich to whom we cater. They do not mind paying 50 paise extra for a product," says Kamal Jain, who runs the Vardhan Juice Centre near the Shivaji Bridge Railway Station in the Capital.

The authorities, however, clarify that the coin is still a legal tender as the government so far has not expressed any intention to de-notify it.

"The 50 paise is not being de-listed to my knowledge. Not accepting the coin is a punishable offence and the violators could be booked under the IPC," a senior official at the Mint Cell in Mumbai told PTI.

When contacted, RBI spokesperson Alpana Killawala said, "all the banks and RBI counters do accept 50 paise coins when exchanged in lieu of currencies."

Customers, on the other hand, blame shopkeepers for blocking the supply of the coin. "They purposefully want to curtail the supply of 50 paise so as to increase their profit and are keen on giving you candies," says Carl Gracias, an employee with Wipro. Squarely putting the blame on shopkeepers, Manish Arora a regular buyer of groceries, says, "to ask for the exact change is your right; the shopkeepers are at fault here."

However, it can be noted that the Government Mint, which rolls out coins, has so far not received the annual indent from the government to mint 50 paise coins this year, indicating the declining demand for the coin.

"We have not received any indent for 50 paise for this fiscal, though last year we did mint these coins," the official at the Mint Cell in Mumbai told PTI. The coins are minted at the four Government Mints in Mumbai, Kolkata, Hyderabad, and Noida. It seems that the ''Attanni'' is going to be a part of history.

(Coutesy: PTI)

Now, a leaf-like car that absorbs CO2 and spews oxygen

Sat, May 22 04:30 PM



New Delhi, May 22 (ANI): Taking cue from the plants' ability to photosynthesise, Chinese automaker Shanghai Automotive Industry Corporation has developed a new concept car that could take in carbon dioxide and produce oxygen.

SAIC, which has a partnership wtih General Motors in China, showed designs for the photosynthesizing YeZ Concept Car recently at Expo 2010 in Shanghai.

YeZ (pronounced "yea-zi") is Mandarin Chinese for "leaf," and it is the apt title for the open buggy-like vehicle, which has a roof shaped like a leaf only, reports Discovery News.

The technical details haven't been articulated, but according to a report in Xinhua, YeZ designer Ma Zhengkun has said that the roof "absorbs solar energy and transforms it into electricity while spinning rotors on the four wheels generate power from the wind."

According to CNET Asia blogger Juniper Foo, the two-seater car would have a "metal-organic framework," which would work to absorb CO2 and water, turning them into electricity that would get stored in a lithium-ion battery.

(Courtesy: ANI)

Say yes to no

Sun, May 23 09:40 AM



It's a fact that 'no' has always been the favourite word of any child – or at least that's how it seems to their harassed parents. But these days, unlike earlier generations, parents seem much less able to cope with the demands made by their children. As a result, any explosion of rage or crying bout from a child aged between five and 12 frequently results in parents hurriedly backtracking from their stance. Here's how to say no to your child – and mean it.

Keep it strict

According to Dr Archana Kavalakkat, consultant paediatrician and neonatologist at Hiranandani Hospital in Thane, the rise in the number of nuclear families and working mothers these days means that parents very often are not able to spend quality time with their children. As a result, in order to make a child happy, they give in to all of his or her demands.

"It is also possible that a mother may give in easily to a child's demands, however unreasonable they may be, merely to get the child off her back as she is tired," explains Dr Maya Kriplani, a psychologist at Jaslok Hospital.

Unfortunately, says Dr Kriplani, these days it is not possible to be as strict with kids as parents of earlier generations were. "My own parents were very strict with me," recalls Dr Kavalakkat. "But you cannot behave in the same manner with kids today. You need to keep the channels of communication open."

No means no

Consistency is the key to get kids to understand that no means no, says Dr Kavalakkat. "It's important to understand that you should not give in to a child's demand even if she or he is persistent," she explains. "If the parent gives in after some time, the child begins to feel that 'If I keep on asking and persist with my demand, mom or dad will give in'."

According to Dr Priyanka Goenka, clinical child psychologist at BL Kapoor and Gangaram Hospital, Delhi, it's the fear of a tantrum that often compels parents to succumb to their kids' demands.

She explains, "These days, kids are used to getting things their own way. At the slightest hint of opposition, they throw a tantrum, preferably in public, or in front of guests, because they know this is the fastest way to get what they want. Most parents would readily give in rather than get into a situation where they have to deal with their child's difficult behaviour."

Adds Dr Goenka, "Parents feel they will be labelled bad parents if their child is crying or making a spectacle of themselves in public. It destroys their own self-constructed image of themselves as perfect parents."

Her advice: remain strong and ask yourself what is the worst thing that can happen if you say no. "If the answer is that the child will indulge in bad behaviour, then realise that your child is already behaving badly, so there's no reason to indulge him or her still further," she says.

Stick to your guns

According to Dr Goenka, a perfect parent is one who can say no to a child, and mean it. "I tell parents that if they keep on saying yes to a child, who will teach the child that in the outside world, she or he will very come across situations where they will not get whatever they want?"

She adds that parents should never satisfy kids when they indulge in unreasonable behaviour, and should also dissuade other people – grandparents, friends and relatives – from butting in. "Inform them that it's your child and that you need to deal with the situation," she says, adding that parents should also present a united front to the child.

Parents who feel they are too lenient are sometimes confused about how to go about changing their behaviour. Dr Kavalakkat suggests, "If the child is old enough, first sit down with him or her and explain that things in life do not come easily. Tell them that you are going to be setting rules for their benefit, and that from now on, these rules will have to be obeyed. With a young child, change your system of behaviour systematically."

How to negotiate

According to Dr Archana Kavalakkat, consultant paediatrician and neonatologist at Hiranandani Hospital in Thane, there are ways to negotiate with a child, while still not giving in entirely.

She explains, "Say your child asks to watch TV while she or he eats a meal, but you have made it clear that you would prefer them not to do so. So explain to the child that while this won't be possible every day, you will permit her or him to watch TV while eating once a week. That way, the child recognises that the parents are being reasonable, but equally that they mean what they say."

When you don't want to give in to a child's demand, such as when she or he wants to go to a late night party, Dr Kavalakkat suggests you explain the reasoning behind your decision. "Tell her or him about instances where teens have been harmed at parties," she says. "Your child will understand you better."

Dr Priyanka Goenka, clinical child psychologist at BL Kapoor and Gangaram Hospital, Delhi, advises not negotiating with a crying child. "Tell the child there won't be any discussion until he or she calms down," she says. "Then wipe their face clean of tears, and only then discuss the matter."

(Courtesy: India Times .com)

Hair Care for Summers

While you are busy taking care of your skin during summers, don't forget your hair. Summer sun and humidity can damage your hair's cuticle and result in dry, brittle and frizzy hair.

As a hair spa or treatment is not possible every time, simple tips can help you a long way in keeping healthy and smooth hair during summers. Deep-conditioning is essential for hair at least once a week.

Hair tends to become dull if it is exposed to to much of sun. One way to keep your hair moist is to apply jojobaoil. Either use it as a treatment before shampooing or apply it to the ends during the day. Before you get in the pool, wet your hair with fresh water, as it will not soak up much of chlorine.

Baking soda is a wonderful inexpensive home remedy. Add 1/4 cup baking soda to your shampoo. You can also mix baking soda with your conditioner. It will give your hair more volume, body and health.

Look for essential oils, herbs and vegetable oils in your hair care products. Essential oils such as rosemary, ylang-ylang and West Indian bay help to stimulate hair growth.

Lavender and tea tree are naturally antiseptic and help to fight dandruff, which is a common problem during summers.Vegetable oils such as soybean oil, safflower oil and corn oil are moisturising and conditioning to the hair shaft.

Try using hair products that contain SPF protection. Hair products that contain moisturisers and SPF protection helps during summers. Dilute 2 teaspoons of SPF 25 sun block down with one cup of water. Using a spray bottle, spray the product into your damp hair before styling.

(Coutesy: Hindustan Times)