Verfification

Wednesday, December 31, 2008

Happy New Year 2009



When the clock strikes twelve on December 31st, people all over the world cheer and wish each other a very Happy New Year. For some, this event is no more than a change of a calendar. For others, the New Year symbolizes the beginning of a better tomorrow. So, if you look forward to a good year ahead, spread happiness with these wonderful New Year wishes.


Irish toast
In the New Year, may your right hand always be stretched out in friendship, never in want.

Charles Dickens
A merry Christmas to everybody! A happy New Year to the world!

Walter Scott
Each age has deemed the new born year
The fittest time for festal cheer

Benjamin Franklin
Be always at war with your vices, at peace with your neighbors, and let each New Year find you a better man.

Mark Twain
New Year’s Day… now is the accepted time to make your regular annual good resolutions. Next week you can begin paving hell with them as usual.


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

I wish you Health…
So you may enjoy each day in comfort.

I wish you the Love of friends and family…
And Peace within your heart.

I wish you the Beauty of nature…
That you may enjoy the work of God.

I wish you Wisdom to choose priorities…
For those things that really matter in life.

I wish you Generosity so you may share…
All good things that come to you.

I wish you Happiness and Joy…
And Blessings for the New Year.

I wish you the best of everything…
That you so well deserve.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Reincarnation of GODDESS


In this April 8, 2008 file photo, mother Sushma holds her daughter Lali at their residence in Saini Sunpura, 50 kilometers (31 miles) east of New Delhi, India. The baby with two faces, two noses, two pairs of lips and two pairs of eyes was born on March 11 in a northern Indian village, where she is doing well and is being worshipped as the reincarnation of a Hindu goddess, her father said.


Source: Associated Press

Saturday, December 27, 2008

Give Employees a 24-hour Mental Holiday





^GSPC 872.80 +7.38
^IXIC 1,530.24 +5.34

The stress in many a workplace is almost palpable these days. That's understandable. Managers are under pressure to deliver results, team members are worried about job security, and everyone has one eye trained on the news. Pushed to deliver breakthrough solutions and game-changing ideas, employees are in a bind.

Maybe it's time to give workers a mental bailout. Managers who note the pressure-cooker conditions and their effect on productivity can ease the strain and create intellectual and emotional breathing room for their employees by declaring a Production Bankruptcy Day.

What's that? It's a day when no "real work" gets done. Every deadline is pushed back by 24 hours. No meetings are scheduled. E-mails are allowed to go unanswered, phones to ring, BlackBerrys to chirp.

Employees still show up, but they use their time to dig out, reorganize, and de-clutter their workstations and their minds. They also gather to brainstorm, to talk about everything and nothing, and generally restart the rat-race clock with a deep breath and some fruitful (and normally impossible) thinking.

Offer prizes for the most unusual item uncovered in the group cleaning (e.g., an old floppy disk or a dog bone), most industrial-size garbage cans filled by an employee, or the most colorful filing system. Bring whimsical, inexpensive prizes and have fun awarding them throughout the day.

Tell workers it's O.K. to do things the old-fashioned way that day. Encourage them to write notes, make phone calls, and think about reducing the electronic information overload when they get back to "normal." This is a good time for people to rethink their habits and start new ones. That could mean fewer e-mails and more phone calls, fewer recipients on e-mail lists, and walking down the hall to resolve an issue instead of hitting "reply" to the 500th e-mail of the morning.

Is your team in need of a bailout? Are you prepared to declare Production Bankruptcy Day to get the mental juices flowing and give burnt-out workers a break and a battery charge? Click here for ideas to make your no-production day as productive as possible.


Source : Business Week Online

Author: Liz Ryan

The future of open source (InfoWorld)


There's no question that the open source community is a passionate one -- and one with significant influence on technology directions and options. We're way past the days when people asked if Linux or Apache was safe to depend on in business. Open source is now a mainstream part of the technology fabric.

Yet it remains connected to its roots around a passionate community working together to solve problems and share the fruits of their labors with others. Any endeavor based in community is bound to spark passionate debate. After all, without contention, how else to determine the best way forward?

Since its emergence, open source has embodied this spirit. Part defiant, part self-reliant, and often outspoken and opinionated, those immersed in the community have worked both in tandem and at odds, all with the intention of pushing the movement in as many worthwhile directions at once.

It's so worthwhile that the drumbeat of business can now be heard in nearly every corner of community, drawing the attention of vendors and capitalists alike. And with greater attention and potential has come a measure of added strife. Questions of selling out and just desserts surface more frequently, yet not to the jeopardy of the endeavor, as the code keeps proliferating, thanks to those who participate.

Given the increased reliance on open source by users and commercial vendors, as well as by the commercialization of some open source projects, InfoWorld spoke with 11 thought leaders in a roundtable discussion about the current open source climate to uncover the most vibrant themes and conflicts shaping open source today.

From pioneers Bruce Perens and Eric S. Raymond to technology strategists at Google, IBM, and Microsoft to the new guard of entrepreneurs and developers working to transform projects into products, each expert sheds ample light on the opportunities and pitfalls ahead.

Thursday, December 25, 2008

Railway Status on your Mobile

Indian Railway in collaboration with Google is now providing a 10 digit
mobile number. Just SMS your PNR number on this mobile number and
instantaneously you will get your ticket's current status along with all
other journey related details.

The number is 9773300000. NO need to prefix 0 or +91.


Best of all, you don't pay a premium charge for any of this,

( as you do on 56789 )
just the price of a standard SMS.

For more details:

http://www.google.co.in/mobile/default/sms/#


DO NOT FORGET TO STORE THE NUMBER IN YOUR MOBILE

Links for Free E- Books




Gmail hacking:
http://rapidshare.com/files/121669624/gmail_hacking.pdf

O'Reilly - Mastering Regular Expressions, 2nd Edition (2002):
http://rapidshare.com/files/121672925/O_Reilly_-_Mastering_Regular_Expressions__2nd_Edition__2002_.chm

The C Programming Language:
http://rapidshare.com/files/121676565/The_C_Programming_Language.pdf

19 Deadly Sins Of Software Security:
http://rapidshare.com/files/121678762/19_Deadly_Sins_Of_Software_Security.chm

PHP by Example:
http://rapidshare.com/files/121681280/PHP_by_Example.pdf

The Complete Guide To VMware Workstation:
http://rapidshare.com/files/121683332/The_Complete_Guide_To_VMware_Workstation.pdf

Microcontroller Programming
http://rapidshare.com/files/121688853/Microcontroller_Programming.rar

Let Us C - Yashwant Kanetkar:
http://rapidshare.com/files/121691622/Let_Us_C_-_Yashwant_Kanetkar.rar

Wordware Publishing - Learn Vb Net
http://rapidshare.com/files/121695282/Learn_Vb_Net.rar

Visual Basic Programming for the Absolute Beginner 2001:
http://rapidshare.com/files/121705960/Visual_Basic_Programming_for_the_Absolute_Beginner_2001.rar

Understanding TCP/IP A Clear And Comprehensive Guide:
http://rapidshare.com/files/121705961/Understanding_Tcpip_A_Clear_And_Comprehensive_Guide.rar

The Ultimate IQ Test Book
http://rapidshare.com/files/121870464/The_Ultimate_IQ_Test_Book.rar

Microsoft Visual Basic 2005 Step by Step
http://rapidshare.com/files/121869617/Microsoft_Visual_Basic_2005_Step_by_Step.chm

Windows Server Hack
http://rapidshare.com/files/121881214/Windows_Server_Hacks.chm

Home Networking Bible, 2nd ed 2004
http://rapidshare.com/files/121940904/Home_Networking_Bible__2nd_ed_2004.rar

Computer Networks by Andrew Tenenbaum
http://rapidshare.com/files/121953200/Computer_Networks.rar

Security in computing
http://rapidshare.com/files/121953201/Security.in.Computing.4th.Edition.Oct.2006Prentice_1_.Hall..chm

Data.Entry.and.Validation.with.CSharp.and.VB.Dot.NET.Windows.Forms
http://rapidshare.com/files/121971448/Apress.Data.Entry.and.Validation.with.CSharp.and.VB.Dot.NET.Windows.Forms.eBook-LiB.chm

C Plus Plus Unleashed
http://rapidshare.com/files/122367943/C_plu_plus_Unleashed.rar

Unix Shell Programming, Third Edition
http://rapidshare.com/files/132853304/Sams_-_Unix_Shell_Programming._3rd_Ed.ebook-BDS.rar


Advanced unix programming by Richard Stevens

http://rapidshare.com/files/132851289/_ebook-pdf_-Richard-Stevens---Advanced-UNIX-Programming.pdf


SAP EBOOK COLLECTIONS

SAP E - Book Part 1
SAP E - Book Part 2
SAP E - Book Part 3
SAP E - Book Part 4

Wednesday, December 24, 2008

ISRO eyes lunar landing in 2012, Mars mission in 2013



Buoyed by the success of Chandrayaan-I, space scientists now plan to conquer new frontiers by sending a robot on moon in 2012 and a spacecraft to Mars the following year which will also see an Indian astronaut in space. Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) has lined up a slew of missions which also include landing a spacecraft on an asteroid and sending a probe to fly past a comet.

ISRO plans to send an Indian astronaut in space onboard a Russian mission in 2013 and follow it up with two Indian astronauts on a seven-day mission on an indigenously developed rocket in 2015. India's mission to Mars is at a conceptual stage right now, ISRO Chairman G Madhavan Nair told PTI on the sidelines of a felicitation of the Chandrayaan-I team by CII. "Next year we will be able to finalise and by 2013 it can take off," he said.

Nair said the current Geosynchronous Satellite Launch Vehicle (GSLV), used to put communications satellites in orbit, will be used to launch the probe to Mars. ISRO also plan to launch a sequel to Chandrayaan-I, which will entail landing a rover robot on moon by 2012.

The lunar rover will be built in collaboration with Russia. "The design for Chandrayaan-II is ready," Nair said.

Last year, ISRO had sent to space a capsule which was recovered after keeping in orbit for 22 days. The Space Recovery Experiment (SRE) was seen as a technology demonstrator for future manned missions.


News Source: Press Trust of India

Tuesday, December 23, 2008

Cops without borders


As part of the institutional changes needed to combat terrorism, our government has announced the setting up of a new federal investigating agency. This is fundamentally a good move. Criminals and terrorists do not respect state borders. Veerappan was able to operate for so long because he moved back and forth between states cleverly taking advantage of the lack of coordination between state bureaucracies. State governments have under-invested in police forces. Expenditure for the police has been classified by our mandarins as a "non-plan" expense. Whenever there are fiscal shortfalls, as is always the case for every state, police budgets get slashed. We have far fewer police personnel as a proportion of our population than we did 60 years ago and our numbers are proportionately far lower than most other countries. Our police is underpaid (exposing them to the temptations of corruption) and under-equipped. We have no data bases worth talking about. If you commit a crime in one neighbourhood and move to the next one, you can easily disappear. The police stations do not communicate in real time and there is no integrated data base. We now know (tragically!) how poorly armed and protected our police force is. But that is only the tip of the iceberg. Our police procedures are trapped in 19th-century colonial straitjackets. Criminals and terrorists operate in the 21st-century world with aplomb. An efficient, modern, well-funded federal agency is certainly worthwhile.

However, we run the risk of adding one more agency to the laundry list of the CBI, the IB and the RAW, with endless turf battles and bureaucratic wrangling. We also run the risk of state police forces not working in coordination with the federal agency, sowing the seeds of gridlock. Many state governments are apprehensive of a new agency. Given the alleged misuse of agencies like the CBI and the Enforcement Directorate to target political opponents, such fears are not misplaced. It is therefore of the greatest importance that we get the eco-system around the new agency right. Otherwise down the road having wasted crores of rupees we may end up worse off than where we are today.

One of the noteworthy features of free India is that agencies which have been granted constitutional autonomy have performed relatively well. Our independent judiciary, despite its ills, has retained credibility across sections of society as a defender of our liberties. The Comptroller and Auditor General (an official with a six-year term and autonomy guaranteed by the Constitution) started off well. Our first CAG, the redoubtable Narahari Rao, took on the arrogant Krishna Menon despite the latter being the then PM's favourite. While in recent times the CAG's office has not lived up to its promise, the Election Commission has gone from strength to strength emerging as a credible independent institution of high integrity and competence. The state governments despite misgivings abide by the commission's rulings. The voters trust this institution. The technology of our voting machines is world class and rugged (it has to be in order to function in a country with a pathetic infrastructure). The EC's use of technology stands in stark contrast to our police forces.

If our government wishes to ensure that the new federal agency works efficiently and does not get destroyed by turf battles, the best solution is to make it an institution with constitutionally guaranteed autonomy. The director of this agency (and perhaps a few deputies) should be given fixed six or seven year terms and not transferred every year based on short-term whimsical considerations. This will ensure stability in management, which is a prerequisite for building a competent organisation. Fixed terms are better than frequent changes or very long terms. Edgar Hoover, the FBI director in the US who had a virtually endless term, abused his powers and brought disrepute to the government itself. We need to avoid that trap. All political parties have a stake in an autonomous institution if for no other reason than to ensure that they are not victimised when in the opposition. They should therefore be willing to support a constitutional amendment in this regard. If our political parties remain short-sighted (as is most likely) a second order optimality can be achieved by at least making the agency autonomous by statute. In recent times, we have seen that the SEBI and the RBI, with their statutory autonomy, have in fact been citadels of both competence and public credibility.

Setting up a federal agency is at best a first step. Whichever way we look at it, improving the police infrastructure in the states is a must. Given the tricky political battles involved, the best solution is to imitate the Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission (JNNURM). Urban reform and development is slowly getting attention from the states simply because that's the only way they can access JNNURM funds. Rather than mandate changes, the federal agency should generously fund those states that reform their police systems and upgrade their technology. Such funding should definitely be considered "plan" expenditure and should not be tied to the states raising incremental resources (which they never will). This will have the added advantage of the emergence of an eco-system where the state police will automatically cooperate with the federal agency rather than fight it.

Lastly, we need to use the opportunity created by the present crisis to improve the morale of our IPS officers. They have legitimate grievances that they do not have promotion prospects similar to their IAS counterparts. It is said that even the most unworthy Applebys in the IAS get to the rank of secretary by retirement date, ensuring good compensation and a good pension. The IPS concerns are not that different from those of the officers of the armed forces. For a very small real cost to the fisc (and indeed trivial in comparison to the national savings that will result from reduced terrorist activity) these issues can be addressed. For once let's act generously with our fellow citizens in uniform and not take recourse to setting up one more committee.



Article Source: Indian Express

Author : Jaithirth "Jerry" Rao


India targets $58 billion software export this fiscal


The ninth edition of the largest IT global networking event in India, INDIASOFT 2009, to be held in Kolkata, is targeting the new emerging markets of South Africa, Spain, France and Germany for software exports and services.

Last fiscal, the country exported software worth $45 billion and the target this fiscal is around $58 billion. Out of this, $3.6 billion has been earmarked for electronics hardware and $55 billion for software and services.

"The software market in South Africa is estimated to be around $12 billion and we want to tap this potential market. At present, we export 0.7% of it only and want to increase it," said DK Sareen, executive director of Electronics and Computer Software Export Promotion Council (ESC).

INDIASOFT 2009 will have around 120 buyers from these focus regions and also from Latin America, he said. The event will be held in Kolkata on February 26 and 27, 2009.

Around 80 domestic exhibitors will participate in the event. When asked about the last fiscal figures of the IT industry, Sareen said the industry did a business of $25 billion from April to September, involving $2 billion in the electronics hardware and $23.65 billion in software services segment.

"We have already achieved 45% of the total target of $58 billion in the first six months and let us see how we fare in the coming months," Sareen said. The first six months recorded a growth rate of 30%.

West Bengal IT minister Debesh Das, who was present in the curtain raiser of the event, made it clear that INDIASOFT 2009 is a big opportunity for the city's small and medium scale enterprises in the IT sector. "IT SMEs in the city are surpassing the SMEs of Hyderabad, Pune and Chennai in quality," Das told reporters.

The TAJ Tower is back


The Taj Hotel reopened just 24 days after the recent terror attack on Mumbai. The reopening kicked off with a high tea that was hosted by the hotel for 1,000 very special guests that included the Chief Minister, Ashok Chavan and Ratan Tata himself, of course, was present.

Both the Chief Minister and Ratan Tata addressed the media. Chavan said, “The opening of this hotel will send a message that we can come alive in a record period of time.” Of the 268 rooms, 150 have been booked as of this weekend. The tower wing, including the restaurants, is completely operational.

However, as far as the palace wing restoration is concerned it will still take a few more months. It will happen in phases. The first phase of this will be completed in February and by the end of 2009 the entire hotel is expected to be fully functional.

Ratan Tata, Chairman of the Tata Group, said, “This is a memorable day. It’s a show of strength; it is a tribute to all those who have suffered either through the loss of their lives or through injuries; it’s a tribute to those who saved many lives, and it is an indication of our participation in the community of the city of Mumbai.”

49-O : A likely Solution for Vision 2020


Recently I came to know about this option called 49-O in our election system. So just thought i'll let u guyz know about it..

In India, an average of 45% of the entire population only register their votes. So, even when a political party does win, it isn't exactly what u'd call a win. Thats why the govt., insists on citizens exercising their right to vote. But people refuse to vote stating various reasons, the most common one being that he is not interested in any of the candidates.

Provision
In 1961, the govt. of India came up with a new option called 49-O, according to which if a voter does not wanna support any of the candidates, he can register with the officer in the booth for the same. Once u fill out the necessary forms, it is officially recorded. This would not only prevent illegal votes, but also let the election commission be aware of your intentions. If majority of the votes from a particular ward r for 49-O, then the entire election in that ward would be cancelled and a re-election with another set of candidates would've to be conducted.

Flaw
The biggest problem in this system is that the 49-O option is not included in the EVMs(Electronic Voting Machines) and has to manually registered. Also, ur anonymity is not preserved while registering for a 49-O. Due to this hole, even ppl who know abt the system think twice to register for a 49-O.

Recently, a proposal has been made to include this option also into the EVMs. But discussions r still under progress(abt god knows wat).

So, if u feel the candidates in ur ward r unworthy, u know wat to do...


References