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DAILY TECH- 15 August 2012
DAILY TECH- 15 AUGUST 2012


   

Today’s Latest News 

HCL unveils 3G tablet ME Y2 for Rs. 14,999 

HCL has launched a new 3G-enabled tablet in the country, the HCL ME Y2 priced at Rs. 14,999.

 

Independence Day: Mob didn't leave even 1857 Martyrs’ Memorial, BMC to now reinstate it

MUMBAI: The mob that went on the rampage on Saturday didn't leave the Martyrs' Memorial outside Azad Maidan that stood a mute witness to history being ground to the dust.  

 


Government to migrate critical IT infrastructure on cloud computing

NEW DELHI: At a time, when private enterprises are only testing the waters around cloud computing, India's central government has made a bold decision to migrate critical information infrastructure on the cloud.

 

Ford India to Recall Cars 

NEW DELHI--Ford Motor Co.'s F +0.53% Indian unit is in the process of recalling some Figo hatchback and Classic sedan models because of potentially faulty parts which could result in breakdowns or even fires.

 

HP Elitebook 2170p, launched at Rs 69,000

New Delhi: Hewlett Packard has brought a new business laptop to India, the HP Elitebook 2170p, and has price it at Rs 69,000. 

 


Video of the Day:


Red Hat Linux 5.0 Step By Step Installation.

Must See Tricks 4 Computer(Click on Image)

 

 


 









HCL unveils 3G tablet ME Y2 for Rs. 14,999 


 

HCL has launched a new 3G-enabled tablet in the country, the HCL ME Y2 priced at Rs. 14,999.

The 7-inch tablet runs on Ice Cream Sandwich out-of-the-box. It features a 2MP rear camera and a VGA front facing camera. The device has a multi touch capacitive screen with a 1024x600 pixel display.

Under the hood, it is powered by a Cortex A9 1GHz processor hosting 1GB RAM. It comes with 8GB internal storage, which is expandable via microSD card.

HCL ME Y2 includes mini-USB and mini-HDMI ports. It has a robust 4000 mAh battery and connectivity options include Wi-Fi,3G and Bluetooth.

The tablet also comes pre-installed with a host of applications, some with special offers. The Hungama Application will offer HCL ME Y2 customers with free three months subscription to download and play unlimited music, videos and ringtones. Users will also get unlimited streaming of movies for a month for just Rs. 1, courtesy Bigflix.

Y2 users can create, view, edit or share MS Office docs via ThinkFree Office Mobile or listen toBollywood music through Saavn. Social media apps include LinkedIn and Twitter.

The Y2 also comes with its own ME App store featuring over 15,000 Android applications optimized for the tablet.


 


Featured Technology Talk

Samsung strengthens home app biz

 

 

 

Chandigarh: Samsung Electronics, a global leader in digital media and digital convergence technologies, today announced its plans to strengthen its Home Appliance business by announcing the launch of its new Direct Cool refrigerator and Semi automatic washing machine range in the country.

Announcing the launch of the new product range, Mahesh Krishnan, Vice-President, Samsung India, said, “We expect atleast 25 per cent growth in business this year. The emerging towns and rural markets to drive the growth in Home Appliances and that is the reason, we have launched our new range of direct cool refrigerators and semi automatic washing machines in the Indian market. We have enriched the new product ranges with features that have been developed keeping in mind the needs of the Indian consumers like the Cool pack feature in Direct Cool refrigerators and the versatile Wash Tray in our semi automatic washing machines.”

In keeping with the requirements of theIndian market, the new range is equipped with the innovative ‘Coolpack’ feature that delays the rise in temperature even when the power is off and prevents food from spoiling quickly even during a blackout. Another special feature is the Freshkit that absorbs bad odours in the refrigerator and keeps the fruits and vegetables fresher for a longer time. The range also offers a differentiated design with soft, unique round shape and is available with floral colour patterns in Red, Silver, Pink, Ultra Inox, Black and Wine.

 





Independence Day: Mob didn't leave even 1857 Martyrs’ Memorial, BMC to now reinstate it   

 

MUMBAI: The mob that went on the rampage on Saturday didn't leave the Martyrs' Memorial outside Azad Maidan that stood a mute witness to history being ground to the dust. The rioters desecrated the monument built in memory of Syed Hussain and Mangal Gadia—two Indian soldiers who were blown apart by a canon in October 1857 by the British during what is called the first war of independence.

The mob damaged the memorial depicting a rifle with a helmet.

Mumbai mayor Sunil Prabhu and municipal commissioner Sitaram Kunte visited the site on Monday . The civic body is now in the process of reinstating the memorial on an urgent basis. The BMC plans to have a fibre glass casing for the memorial to offer protection and plans to reinstate it by Independence Day.

"Work has already started. The state government should have taken a note of it and issued orders to reinstate it. But instead the BMC has taken the initiative. By desecrating the memorial, it has hurt the sentiments of all Indians and it is shameful," Prabhu said.

"If one has to vent anger against the state, the protest should be peaceful. It shouldn't be directed at national symbols. We highly condemn this. The first war of Indian Independence was led by a Muslim Bahadur Shah Zafar, the last Mughal emperor," Samajwadi Party leader and corporator Rais Shaik said.

 


 


Government to migrate critical IT infrastructure on cloud computing 

 

NEW DELHI: At a time, when private enterprises are only testing the waters around cloud computing, India's central government has made a bold decision to migrate critical information infrastructure on the cloud.

Department of information technology is planning to set up a national cloud based network that connects all state data centers which would make that the backbone of national e-governance plan, which when completed would deliver many government to citizen and government business services via the internet.

 In effect, each of the 28 states and 7 union territories will now have a private cloud of their own. The Department of IT has invited proposals from IT companies like HP, IBM, Cisco and Dell to set up and maintain private clouds in each state. The move may cost the Centre less than Rs 100 crore, and will help the exchequer prevent wastage of money on duplication of resources.

State Data Centres built at a cost of Rs 4-5 crore each, are operational in about 16 states, with the rest lagging behind. UP, Punjab, Assam, Mizoram, Jharkhand, Chattisgarh are laggards, even as all states in the South have fully functional data centres, provisioning many public services online.

The move will save taxpayer's money and time, as IT resources like servers and storage will be shared amongst departments, and also provide elasticity and on demand services.

"SDC will now be operated as a Private Cloud for each State and will be managed by a third party," the draft tender put out by the Department of IT, last month.

Though India has woken up only now, other government have taken a lead. US was one of the first government's in the world to come out with a federal cloud strategy, which was invoked by CIO of the US Vivek Kundra in 2010-11. The Obama government has allocated $20 billion of the Federal Government's IT budget to migrate existing infrastructure on the cloud.

UK government has also come up with a G-cloud strategy for reduction in costs, and achieve 'economies of scale'.

An India-based e-governance official at a US based IT firm told ET that the company had been making presentations to the government for last six months, on cloud adoption, as other governments are adopting across the world. The official expects the final RFP to be out in 2-3 months, as the new IT Secretary J Satynarayana has come on board.

The public cloud computing market in India is expected to grow at $685 million by 2014, according to an independent research firm Zinnov Management Consulting.

US IT companies HP and IBM are expected to benefit the most, if India goes the cloud way, as most operational data centres have been built and being operated by the two firms.

As per Zinnov Consulting, the overall Indian market for Cloud is about $860-$912 million. Of this Public Cloud market comprises of only 20% share, while the remaining 78-80% is accounted by Private Cloud. Zinnov estimates Public Cloud market to grow to $685 million by 2014 in India.

"The IT department at center has been talking about setting up cloud computing based services for a while now but what remains to be seen is how fast these services will be set up," said Prof Sadagopan - Director of IIIT - Bangalore and Chairman - Core Committee Meeting at the Center for e-governance, Karnataka. "Once established, it'll be big shift from our current PC culture but we also need greater understanding of the data security challenges that could arise out of this." 

 

 


TECHNOLOGY

 

 "Defect-free software does not exist. "

 

 

RIM says BlackBerry 10 will soon be ready to licence: Report


 

Toronto: Research In Motion Ltd will soon be ready to licence its new BlackBerry 10 operating system to other manufacturers, according to a report on Monday.

The new platform is in the final stages of testing, and RIM is now considering how other companies may be able to use it in a range of products, Chief Executive Officer Thorsten Heins told Bloomberg News.

"QNX is already licensed across the automotive sector - we could do that with BB10 if we chose to," Heins said in New York. "The platform can be licensed."

Waterloo, Ontario-based RIM, whose BlackBerry devices have lost ground to rivals like Apple Inc's iPhone and a range of devices that run on Google Inc's Android software, is set to launch its own line of devices that run on BB10 in the first quarter of 2013.

 


Famous Scientist

 

 

John Ericsson


John Ericsson (July 31, 1803 – March 8, 1889) was a Swedish-American inventor and mechanical engineer, as was his brother Nils Ericson. He was born at Långbanshyttan in Värmland, Sweden, but primarily came to be active in England and the United States. He is remembered best for designing the steam locomotive Novelty (in partnership with engineer John Braithwaite) and the ironclad USS Monitor.

John's and Nils's father Olaf Ericsson who worked as the supervisor for a mine in Värmland had lost money in speculations and had to move his family from Värmland to Forsvik in 1810. There he worked as a 'director of blastings' during the excavation of the Swedish Göta Canal. The extraordinary skills of the two brothers were discovered by Baltzar von Platen, the architect of the Göta Canal. The two brothers were dubbed cadets of mechanics of the Swedish Royal Navy and engaged as trainees at the canal enterprise. At the age of fourteen, John was already working independently as a surveyor. His assistant had to carry a footstool for him to reach the instruments during surveying work.

At the age of seventeen he joined the Swedish army in Jämtland, serving in the Jämtland Field Ranger Regiment, as a Second Lieutenant, but was soon promoted to Lieutenant. He was sent to northern Sweden to do surveying, and in his spare time he constructed a heat engine which used the fumes from the fire instead of steam as a propellant. His skill and interest in mechanics made him resign from the army and move to England in 1826. However his heat engine was not a success, as his prototype was designed to burn birchwood and would not work well with coal (the main fuel used in England).

German drawing (1833) of steam locomotive "Wilhelm IV" with scale in feet, built by "Braithwaite und Ericsson".

Notwithstanding the disappointment, he invented several other mechanisms instead based on steam, improving the heating process by adding fans to increase oxygen supply to the fire bed. In 1829 he and John Braithwaite built "Novelty" for the Rainhill Trials arranged by the Liverpool and Manchester Railway. It proved considerably faster than the other entrants but suffered recurring boiler problems, and the competition was won by English engineers George and Robert Stephenson with Rocket.

Two further engines were built by Braithwaite and Ericsson, named William IV and Queen Adelaide after the new king and queen. These were generally larger and more robust than Novelty and differed in several details (for example it is thought that a different design of blower was used which was an ‘Induced Draught’ type, sucking the gases from the fire). The pair ran trials on the Liverpool and Manchester Railway but the railway declined to purchase the new designs.

He then improved the ship design with two screw-propellers moving in different directions (as opposed to earlier tests with this technology, which used a single screw). However, the Admiralty disapproved of the invention, which led to the fortunate contact with the encouraging American captain Robert Stockton who had Ericsson design a propeller steamer for him and told him to bring his invention to the United States of America, as it would supposedly be more welcomed in that place. As a result, Ericsson moved to New York in 1839.

  









 

Ford India to Recall Cars  

 

 

NEW DELHI--Ford Motor Co.'s F +0.53% Indian unit is in the process of recalling some Figo hatchback and Classic sedan models because of potentially faulty parts which could result in breakdowns or even fires.

The company said it is inspecting both gasoline and diesel variants of the Classic manufactured between January 2008 and December 2010 and those of the Figo made from March 2010 to December 2010 for a possible crack in the rear twist beam.

The crack can cause an abnormal noise which can lead to diminished performance, and even render the vehicle inoperable, the company said in an emailed statement Monday.

It is also recalling gasoline variants of the Figo and the Classic made between September 2010 and February 2011 because of oil leaks from the power-steering hose.

It is possible for the fluid used in the power-steering system "to come into contact with the vehicle's exhaust components, creating potential for smoke and, in extreme cases, fire," the company said.

Ford didn't say how many vehicles it is recalling or what will be the cost.

Ford launched the Figo, its first small car in India, in March 2010. The model has helped Ford revive sales in the country as it allowed the company to offer a product at price points which are preferred by a majority in India where nearly two-thirds of all cars sold are small hatchbacks.

The auto maker was banking heavily on local suppliers for the Figo to keep its costs low. The company buys nearly 85% of the Figo's parts from local suppliers.

Ford now joins Maruti Suzuki India Ltd., 532500.BY -1.20% Toyota Motor Corp., 7203.TO -0.63% Honda Motor Co., 7267.TO +0.12% Suzuki Motor Corp. 7269.TO +0.13% and Tata Motors Ltd. TTM -1.09% in recalling cars in India to replace faulty parts.

Suzuki Motor Corp.'s local unit, Maruti Suzuki, in April last year recalled 13,157 units of diesel cars to inspect a defective part. That followed a similar move in February 2010 when it recalled more than 100,000 units of small car A-Star to replace a defective part in the fuel tank.

Toyota Kirloskar Motor Pvt. Ltd. recalled 40,000 units of its Etios sedan and Liva hatchback cars in December for possible cracks in their hose pipes and fuel pipes.

Honda Siel Cars India Ltd. has had three recalls in India in the recent past, the latest being in September 2011 to replace power-window switches on 72,115 of its City sedans.

Tata Motors, India's biggest auto maker by revenue, offered additional safety equipment on its Nano minicar in November last year after some incidents of the car catching fire.

Besides the Figo and the Classic, Ford also makes the Fiesta sedan and the Endeavour sport-utility vehicle at a factory in the southern city of Chennai.

Ford is investing $1 billion to build a new factory at Sanand in the western Gujarat state that will be operational by 2014.





HP Elitebook 2170p, launched at Rs 69,000

 

New Delhi: Hewlett Packard has brought a new business laptop to India, the HP Elitebook 2170p, and has price it at Rs 69,000.

The Elitebook carries a relatively small screen (11.6-inch screen) and weighs just about 1.31 kg and a has an eight hour battery life.

HP’s smallest laptop, the Elitebook 2170p has management and security features, carries enterprise-level connectivity, along with durable features such as HP FitTight battery lock, HP DisplaySafe frame, and HP DuraCase.

In other features, the notebook will include laser-precision indicators, HP Power Assistant for the battery conservation, an optional backlight keyboard, and a fingerprint scanner to go along with the package.

The HP Elitebook 2170p will sport Intel’s ultra-low voltage Ivy Bridge processors in the Core i3, i5 and i7 variants. Hard drive configurations are available in 500GB HDD and 256 GB SSDs. The laptop relies on integrated graphics, Unified Memory Architecture (UMA), and an expandable virtual memory up to 16 GB of 1600 MHz DDR3 RAM.

The Elitebook 2170p’s 11.6-inch LED-backlit anti-glare display bears a resolution of 1366×768 pixels. The laptop also features a 720p HD webcam.


 



Tips to make your browser secure

MUNICH: Web browsers are the key to the internet. Without them the internet is an impenetrable black box.

Browsers may be among the most commonly used applications, but they also offer the greatest number of attack options for dangerous content on the net.To keep viruses, worms and other malware away from your computer when surfing,it's crucial to configure your browser for security.

The firewall on a DSL router is a good first step for protecting the computer during surfing, says Marco Rinne from the computer portal chip.de. But that doesn't hold true if your browser is out of date: “Internet Explorer 6 and 7 or Firefox 2 no longer satisfy current security standards,” he says. For optimal protection, he therefore urgesusers to keep theirbrowsers updated.

There are numeroussecurity tools already present in Firefox and Internet Explorer. The pop-up blocker,for example, prevents more than justannoying ads. It alsothrottles other windows that can be used to sneak malicious software onto PCs. Phishing filters protect personal dataagainst theft.

Firefox offers additional configurationoptions underthe Settings item in the Security tab of the Options dialog box: thisincludes the ability to block risky or forgedwebsites.It's also a good idea to prohibit websites from installing add-ons on their own. Similar settings are possible under Internet Explorer in the Security tab of the Internet Options dialog box, accessible from the Tools menu.

Computer owners should also activate all options for warning against attacks, advises Markus Linnemann, managing director of the Institute for Internet Security (ifis) at the Polytechnic University of Gelsenkirchen in Germany. This applies in particular to warnings about suspicious content to be displayed using ActiveX, Flash, or JavaScript.

Yet the warning mechanism on most browsers alone isn't usually enough, Linnemann says. Those who wish to be especially careful can, for example, use the Firefox add-on 'No Script,' which blocks all active content of a website by default and allows the user to decide which should be permitted. The problem is that most users are unable to determine   which content represents a threat to their computer, Rinne msays. 







When lightning strikes it can reach up to 30,000 degrees celsius (54,000 degrees fahrenheit)



Cartoon of Technology



Karbonn unveils Smart Tab 2

 

Bangalore: Bangalore-based Karbonn is ready to bring its new low-budget tab, the Smart Tab 2, in the market and is available for Rs 7,990. The tablet is also available for Rs 6,990 on some online stores.

The Smart Tab 2 carries an Android 4.0.3 Ice Cream Sandwich and is all set to receive the Jelly Bean 4.1 update. It sports a 7-inch capacitive display and is powered by a 1.2 GHz processor with a 3D G-Sensor for gamers.


 

“Knowing is not enough; we must apply. Willing is not enough; we must do."