Thursday, November 01, 2012

Food wasted every year in the world is enough to feed 500 million people: UN FAO reports


The United Nations’ Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) says the total food wasted every year in the world is enough to feed 500 million people.

“Around one-third of all the food produced in the world is lost or wasted every year,” FAO Director General Jose Graziano da Silva said. 

The FAO chief added that this amount was enough to feed 500 million people without putting any additional pressure on natural resources. 

A recent report commissioned by the FAO found that “every year, consumers in rich countries waste almost as much food (222 million tons) as the entire net food production of sub-Saharan Africa (230 million tons).” 

Da Silva said one of the reasons of food wastage was “a tendency to excessive consumption in middle and high-income countries,” adding that eliminating this wastage was an important step in achieving zero hunger.

Earlier this month, the United Nations Environment Program (UNEP) expressed concern over the wastage of food all over the world, saying that countries need to invest in increasing storage capacities to meet the food requirements of the future. 

“We are raising awareness among countries on food wastage and telling the governments and others to pay attention to it. In some developing countries it is an issue of distribution and storage,” UNEP Deputy Executive Director and UN Assistant Secretary General Amina Mohamed said. 

(Source: http://www.presstv.ir/detail/269136.html ; Report dated 28 Oct 2012)

Saturday, October 20, 2012

Malala escaped certain death by centimetres, say doctors

London: Malala Yousufzai, the Pakistani schoolgirl shot in the head by the Taliban, has stood up with help for the first time but remains seriously ill, doctors treating her at a British hospital said on Friday.

She is unable to talk due to the breathing tube inserted into her windpipe but she can communicate by writing, said Dave Rosser, the medical director at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Birmingham, central England.

The teenager escaped certain death by a matter of centimetres (inches), with the bullet grazing the edge of her brain, he revealed.

(Full story: NDTV; http://www.ndtv.com/article/world/malala-escaped-certain-death-by-centimetres-say-doctors-282094?v_recent_also_see)

Three MPs wanted 193 kgs of excess baggage on Air India. For free.

New Delhi: Air India staff resisted pressure from three Members of Parliament and refused to waive the charges for 193 kg of excess baggage being carried by them from Guwahati to Delhi. The MPs were forced to make payments and carry the goods in cargo instead.

Three Lok Sabha MPs - Uttar Pradesh Congress chief and Faizabad MP Nirmal Khatri, Congress MP from Almora Pradeep Tamta and BJP MP from Meerut Rajendra Agrawal - were returning from Guwahati in Air India's flight AI 9612 on Tuesday, airline sources said.

They wanted to check-in together with 268 kg of baggage, though airline policy says an economy class passenger is allowed to carry only 25 kg of checked-in luggage.
The MPs, who are members of Parliament's Rajbhasha panel and had gone to Guwahati for an official meeting, wanted the airline's station manager to waive off the excess baggage charges.

But the airline officials expressed inability citing Civil Aviation Minister Ajit Singh's August directive prohibiting any waiver on excess baggage allowance to VVIPs, ministers and bureaucrats, the sources said.

The MPs were asked to book the excess baggage in cargo after paying a fee, to which they agreed and the baggage came to Delhi in another flight, they said.
(Source: NDTV 19 Oct 2012; http://www.ndtv.com/article/india/three-mps-wanted-193-kgs-of-excess-baggage-on-air-india-for-free-278976?h_related_also_see)

Friday, October 19, 2012

City SP arrested in Chandigarh for accepting bribe


The Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) has arrested a senior police officer in Chandigarh after he was allegedly caught accepting Rs. one lakh in bribe from a junior officer. Superintendent of Police (City) Deshraj was caught red-handed late of Thursday night while accepting Rs. one lakh as an initial amount of the Rs. 25 lakh bribe he had demanded from Station House Officer (SHO) Anokh Singh, CBI Deputy Inspector General Mahesh Aggarwal said.


Digvijaya Singh's letter to Arvind Kejriwal, calling him megalomaniac

Dear Shri Arvind,

We first met during a seminar at Berkeley University in San Francisco and I was quite impressed by your commitment to the cause of RTI. You had worked quite closely with Ms. Aruna Roy, who was instrumental in fighting for the cause of RTI in India.

Though we lost touch, but I did follow what you had been doing.

We met again when you, along with Swami Agnivesh, approached me with a request to invite Congress President for a Conference on RTI. You were all praise for Mrs. Sonia Gandhi whose political will ensured RTI Act that became a reality in India. I am aware that how fiercely the Establishment opposed this Act, but she stood her ground and had it passed in the Parliament.

Then, you wanted to meet her and had requested me to propose your name for inclusion in the NAC. I did propose your name, but failed. She took Aruna Roy, who was your Guru.

A strong Lokpal was the next main item on the Agenda of Congress President. She had publicly declared her intent at the AICC Session at Burari in December 2010. She entrusted this task to NAC members Aruna Roy and Harshmandar and directed them to draft a strong Lokpal Bill.

I feel this was the time when you made up your mind to upstage NAC by bringing in Anna Hazare and force the Government to engage you in drafting the Lokpal Bill.

Your draft, if accepted in totality, would have made the Jan Lokpal as the most Powerful Man in our successful and functional Democracy, without being accountable to anyone.

You could have waited for the draft being prepared by your Guru Aruna Roy and then suggested amendments, which could have been discussed by all political parties to enable an acceptable draft to emerge and get adopted.

You are aware of the fractured structure of the Parliament and do realize that any legislation in this Parliament can be passed with a consensus only. But you forced Anna to take the route of "my way or the highway", and tried to steamroll the political process to meet only your own whims. When YP Singh (Retd IPS), your former colleague in civil society movement, called you a Hitler, I could see the streak in you.

My opinion about you of a well meaning crusader of public issues has now changed to a "self serving ambitious megalomaniac with scant regard for democracy".

You couldn't get along with Aruna Roy, who was your Guru in RTI movement. Then you parted ways with Kiran Bedi and now, also with Anna, whom you used as a front to give your ambitions a touch of respectability.

I am very happy you have chosen to form a political party and have decided to fight elections. In a Democracy, this is the only way to deliver in Public Life.

I have been in politics for more than 40 years, starting as a President of my small Municipality to becoming Chief Minister of then the largest State in India.

I have held positions where I could have made Billions, but have practiced Probity in my public life and therefore placed my list of assets and the assets of my Ministers every year on the table of the House in my tenure as Chief Minister of MP. Incidentally, the BJP Government, who succeeded me, discontinued this practice.

I have hauled all those who have made charges of corruption against me to the Court and they haven't been able to substantiate any charge against me in the Court.

Recently, I saw your interview in Economic Times about what would you like to do if you ever came to power. You listed following priorities - Decentralisation, Empowerment of the People, Gram Swarajya and Right to Recall. 

Please ask your Gurus of Civil Society Anna Hazare, SC Behar and Dr. BD Sharma if I didn't do all that as Chief Minister of MP.

In fact, while doing all this, I was only following the core policy of Congress Party since the days of Mahatma Gandhi. Interestingly, you yourself had mentioned in your ET interview about the contribution of Sh. Rajeev Gandhi in strengthening and empowering the people of India through Panchayati Raj. Needless to mention that Universal Franchise, Freedom of Speech, Free Media, Secularism, Equality of all castes & creeds, Abolition of Untouchability, Panchayati Raj, Reservation to Women in Local Bodies, Right to Information Act have all been the ideas promoted and implemented by the Congress Party.

Therefore, my only advise to you as a senior politician is to "first practice, then preach".

Lately, I have been seeing you asking questions to people against whom you are making allegations. Therefore, I also have certain questions to ask to you. Would you answer them or dismiss them all in the manner my uncomfortable  questionsto Sangh, Anna and Ramdev have been dismissed?

I would be sending the questions to you tomorrow.

Best wishes,

(DIGVIJAYA SINGH)

(Source: NDTV, 19 Oct 2012; http://www.ndtv.com/article/india/full-text-digvijaya-singh-calls-arvind-kejriwal-megalomaniac-in-letter-282040?h_related_also_see)

Thursday, October 18, 2012

Mother and daughter killed in witch hunt


Daspur Oct. 17: Three women, including a mother and a daughter, were beaten to death yesterday after being branded witches by villagers in West Midnapore, in what some said was the fallout of Trinamul-CPM rivalry.
Police said all three belonged to the same family and were CPM supporters. The bodies of Phumani Singh, 72; her daughter Titli, 42; and Titli’s sister-in-law Sambari, 40, were buried on the banks of the Kansai in Debra. Two of their distant relatives — Budhu Singh and Mongla Singh — are missing since yesterday.
District superintendent of police Sunil Chowdhury said seven persons have been arrested.
According to some youths in Dubrajpur, the three women were being threatened by local Trinamul workers with dire consequences if they didn’t defect to their party.
Youth Trinamul president of Narajole Tarun Maity denied the allegation. “Last night’s incident happened because of their long-standing dispute with the villagers who believed the three were witches. It has nothing to do with Trinamul,” he said.
A farmer said some villagers had been telling people that the trio were responsible for several deaths in the area in the past few weeks. “They were telling people the women were witches and it was because of their evil spell that men and animals in the area were dying,” he said.
The youth named one Thaba Singh as leading the group.
According to another villager, the mother and daughter were taken to a salishi in the house of Trinamul leader Bablu Singh last evening. Titli’s husband, he added, had gone to an adjoining village to watch a football match and her 16-year-old son was held by some villagers. The third lady was taken to another village.
“Bablu asked the women to pay Rs 60,000. When they pleaded helplessness, around 20 villagers started beating them up with sticks. I didn’t dare raise an alarm,” he added.
Bablu refused comment.

(Source: TT, 18 Oct 2012; http://www.telegraphindia.com/1121018/jsp/bengal/story_16103655.jsp#.UIBCrW93bp8)

RULED BY A TAINTED LOT


The former prime minister, Indira Gandhi, had created a stir when she had said that corruption is a part of life. How true were her words. Today, corruption is not just a part of life but it has also taken over the entire system. So much so that the general tendency is to laugh when those in authority express concern at the situation and promise to undertake measures to tackle the affliction.
The latest to do so has been the prime minster, Manmohan Singh. He has done so at a time when almost every other day serious allegations are being hurled against the high and mighty. While expressing his concern, the prime minister should have taken the reality into account. He should have known that his government is not in a position to do anything to clear the mess. He and his ministers are dependent for their survival on two political parties whose leaders would have had the law knocking on their doors to probe charges against them if this was any other country.
While expressing his concern, the prime minister spoke of the need to take another look at the existing laws. Again, he should have known that there is no dearth of laws in this country. All that is needed is the will to go ahead and take the bull by the horn. But it is unlikely that his party will allow him to tell the accused that while he is thankful for their support in Parliament, they should not expect the government not to act in the interest of probity in public life.
Meanwhile, the nation is being made to witness the sickening spectacle of blackmail. The Congress is also part of the game. It has played the two major parties in Uttar Pradesh against each other for long in the hope that such a strategy would help it regain its lost ground. Little did it realize that a day will come when it will need both these parties in the nation’s capital. Of the two political outfits, the Bahujan Samaj Party seems to be exploiting the situation the most.
Give and take
A suggestion of an inquiry into the BSP chief’s alleged disproportionate assets brought the threat that she might withdraw support to the government. Then came the announcement that the party had left the decision to her. It is no secret that in all matters it is she who takes decisions. So what was new about the announcement? What was left unsaid was that the threat had worked, and that she had been told to rest easy. The Samajwadi Party’s volte-face during the presidential election has also been attributed to behind-the-scene parleys.
The quid pro quo from the Congress, of course, takes different forms. Together with the assurance of inaction by the investigating agencies, there have been open bonanzas like the bumper financial aid to the state and the decision to make Agra the venue of a mega corporate world event. The Congress is desperate to ensure that UPA II lasts its full term. Hence, many more such instances of threats and pressure tactics may be seen in the days to come.
This, it might be argued, is realpolitik and should not be faulted. But then why adopt a high moral tone? Why speak of corruption as a curse that must be fought? Since the Congress swears by Indira Gandhi, it should not forget that she, at least, had never shed crocodile tears. She knew what the reality was and made no effort to change it. The present prime minister finds himself burdened with the image of being someone without the wherewithal to clear the Augean stables. He would do well to accept this reality and not express concern over an issue that has become a non-issue for the aam admi. He should also draw comfort from the fact that his opponents are no better.

(Link: http://www.telegraphindia.com/1121018/jsp/opinion/story_16100403.jsp#.UIBB3m93bp8)

Sunlight reaching the ground has decreased across India over the past three decades

The Telegraph, Kolkata, 18 Oct 2012

New Delhi, Oct. 17: If you feel your days are not so bright any more, it could be because even sunlight has joined the ranks of industrialists, lampooners and dissenters who appear to be shunning Calcutta.
Sunlight reaching the ground has decreased across India over the past three decades, but Calcutta appears to have suffered the sharpest dip among 12 cities.
Scientists have documented a steady decline in the solar radiation reaching the ground across the country, a trend they say contrasts with brighter days observed since 1990 across western Europe, North America and parts of China.
The researchers at the Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorology (IITM), Pune, examining long-term trends in solar radiation through a series of studies, have observed declines in both bright sunshine hours and overall brightness in several cities.
One IITM study suggests that Calcutta’s days are now on average about 14 per cent less bright now than they were in the early-1970s, while the solar radiation near the ground in New Delhi has reduced by about 12 per cent during that period.
Scientists say the implications of these changes are still unclear but decreased sunlight has the potential to exacerbate vitamin D deficiency, increase the risk of allergies, pull down crop yields, and alter the hydrological cycle through reduced evaporation.
Endocrinologists say reduced sunlight hours could have implications for populations already deficient in vitamin D. “We already have indications of widespread vitamin D deficiency in Calcutta and other cities in India,” said Satinath Mukhopadhyay, an endocrinologist at the Institute of Post Graduate Medical Education and Research (IPGMER) hospital, Calcutta.
A study of a sample of healthy persons accompanying patients visiting the IPGMER hospital, Mukhopadhyay said, indicates that up to 70 per cent of the population may have some level of vitamin D deficiency.
Some medical studies suggest that sunlight, through vitamin D, can protect children from childhood asthma, while others have hinted at a role for this key vitamin in fighting infections such as tuberculosis.
“Of course, sunlight exposure doesn’t depend exclusively on the amount of solar radiation on the ground, it also depends greatly on occupations and behaviour,” an endocrinologist said.
An analysis of 35 years of near-ground solar radiation data collected from 12 cities suggests that the duration of bright sunshine hours has on average reduced by 12 minutes per decade between 1971 and 2005. Vishakhapatnam on the east coast has shown the most significant loss of bright sunshine hours -- nearly 30 minutes per decade during that period.
“What we’re seeing is not alarming but it isn’t something we can ignore,” said Govindan Pandithurai, an atmospheric physicist at the IITM who is among scientists tracking trends in solar radiation.
Researchers believe a combination of changes in cloud cover, cloud properties and tiny particles of dust, soot, and salts in the atmosphere -- collectively called aerosols -- have contributed to the reduced sunlight.
“But we still need to understand exactly how these components affect sunlight, and which of them is contributing the most at which locations,” Pandithurai told The Telegraph.
The Indian observations are consistent with climate charts generated by the Asian Turfgrass Centre in Thailand that suggest that Calcutta, among 52 cities worldwide, had the second lowest hours of sunlight in September, after Doula in Cameroon.
At the IITM, another atmospheric scientist, B. Padma Kumari, is currently exploring how the observed reduced solar radiation might affect the hydrological cycle over the subcontinent.
“Evaporation over continental India shows a significant decreasing trend -- as would be expected under the trend of decreased solar radiation,” Kumari said.
Agricultural scientists alerted by these studies have launched their own observations to determine whether reduced sunlight hours might in any way influence crop yields, mainly in the Indo-Gangetic plains.
“Any impact on crops will depend on the phase of plant growth during which sunlight is reduced,” said Vadlamudi Uma Maheshwar Rao, director of the All India Co-ordinated Project on Agricultural Meteorology, Hyderabad.
Rao and his colleagues have established 22 sunlight measuring instruments in agricultural universities in different states for daily solar radiation data to correlate sunlight with the growth phase of different cultivated crops.
Sections of atmospheric scientists say human activities such as fossil fuel emissions, biomass burning, and construction can contribute to the load of aerosols in the atmosphere that can obstruct sunlight.
“But we’re not ready yet to quantify the contribution from aerosols to the reduced sunlight,” said Vijay Soni, a scientist at the India Meteorological Department, New Delhi.
Calcutta’s diffuse radiation --sunlight reflected by particles in the atmosphere -- shows a tiny decline by 0.4 per cent per decade. If the solar radiation reduction was because of aerosols, Soni said, the diffused light should have increased.
“On the other hand, Jodhpur has seen a 3.6 per cent radiation decline per decade, but it is not an industrialised city,” Soni said. “Changes in dust load from the Thar desert are likely to be contributing to Jodhpur’s loss of sunlight.”
Kumari said a similar “dimming” trend observed across North America and western Europe during the 1980s appears to have reversed since the early-1990s. “This has been attributed to pollution control measures,” she said.
But scientists believe the properties of clouds and their interaction with aerosols in the tropical regions might be different from those in the northern latitudes. That, Pandithurai said, might also explain the contrast between India and those locations.
Source: http://www.telegraphindia.com/1121018/jsp/frontpage/story_16103465.jsp#.UIA_JG93bp8

Tuesday, October 16, 2012

Malaysia’s Stunning Green Diamond Building Wins Southeast Asia Energy Prize


The Diamond Building (Bangunan Berlian in Malay), so named for its unique shape, is topped with photovoltaic (PV) solar panels, which generate about 10 percent of the building’s energy. Rainwater harvesting systems save about 70 to 80 percent of water usage. The Diamond Building’s inverted pyramid configuration allows more roof space for solar panels and more ground space for greenery. The centerpiece of the building is a large central atrium designed to admit and regulate daylighting using “an automatic roller-blind system responsive to the intensity as well as the angle of the incident sunlight,” according to the Energy Commission.
According to Allan Koay, writing for The Star, the Diamond Building was designed by NR Architect of Kuala Lumpur, with Thai architect Dr. Soontorn Boonyatikam serving as principal for the project. IEN Consultants of Kuala Lumpur provided sustainable design consulting and engineering services.
IEN says that the building “is self-shading for direct solar radiation,” with facades and an atrium “optimized to direct diffuse daylight into the building.” The group says that “The crown of the atrium has spectrally selective glazing and a dynamic shading system balanced so that cool daylight is admitted to the atrium in response to outdoor lighting conditions.” The building’s integrated cooling system utilizes coils embedded in the concrete floor slabs that keep floor and ceiling temperatures between 19 and 21 degrees Celsius.
ASEAN, the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, is an international body made up of ten countries in Southeast Asia. The ASEAN Centre for Energy, sponsor of the energy awards program, is an intergovernmental cooperative organization representing the ASEAN nations, established to initiate collective projects focused around energy. The Energy Commission of Malaysia is the country’s energy regulatory body located in the city of Putrajaya, the seat of Malaysia’s federal government.


Read more: Malaysia’s Stunning Green Diamond Building Wins Southeast Asia Energy Prize Energy Commission of Malaysia Diamond Building by NR Architect – Inhabitat - Sustainable Design Innovation, Eco Architecture, Green Building 

Friday, October 12, 2012

Nobel Peace for EU


OSLO, Oct 12 (Reuters) - The European Union won the Nobel Peace Prize on Friday for its historic role in uniting the continent in an award meant as a morale boost for the bloc as it struggles to resolve its debt crisis.
The EU has been a key in transforming Europe “from a continent of wars to a continent of peace,” Committee chairman Thorbjoern Jagland said in announcing the award in Oslo.
“This is a message to Europe to do everything they can to secure what they've achieved and move forward,” Jagland said, saying it was a reminder of what would be lost “if the union is allowed to collapse”.
He praised the 27-nation EU for rebuilding after World War Two and for its role in spreading stability after the 1989 fall of the Berlin Wall.
The prize, worth $1.2 million, will be presented in Oslo on Dec. 10. The decision by the five-member panel, led by Jagland who is also Secretary-General of the Council of Europe, was unanimous.
The EU won from a field of 231 candidates including Russian dissidents and religious leaders working for Muslim-Christian reconciliation.
But the EU is mired in crisis with strains on the euro, the common currency shared by 17 nations. The prize was a surprise given the EU's current woes.
And many Norwegians are bitterly opposed to the EU, seeing it as a threat to the sovereignty of nation states. “I find this absurd,” the leader of Norway's anti-EU membership organisation Heming Olaussen told NRK.
“In Latin America and other parts of the world they will view this quite differently than they will from Brussels. The union is a trade bloc that contributes to keeping many countries in poverty.”
Norway, the home of the peace prize, has voted “no” twice to joining the EU, in 1972 and 1994. The country has prospered outside the EU, partly thanks to huge oil and gas resources.

Read more: http://www.telegraphindia.com/1121012/jsp/frontpage/story_16082875.jsp#.UHfqkW93bp8

Nobel Literature prize for Mo Yan


Oct. 11: Chinese national television today broke into its tightly scripted newscast to make a highly unusual announcement: Chinese writer Mo Yan has won the Nobel Prize in literature.
For a government that had disowned the only previous Chinese winner of the award — an exiled critic — today’s choice appeared to be a cause of pride.
Some of the books of Mo, who was once so destitute he ate tree bark and weeds to survive, have been banned as “provocative and vulgar” by Chinese authorities but he has also been criticised as being too close to the Communist Party.
While users of a popular Chinese microblogging site offered their congratulations, dissident artist Ai Weiwei said he disagreed with giving the award to a writer with the “taint of government” about him.
The Swedish Academy, which selects the winners of the prestigious award, praised Mo’s “hallucinatory realism” saying it “merges folk tales, history and the contemporary”.
“Through a mixture of fantasy and reality, historical and social perspectives, Mo Yan has created a world reminiscent in its complexity of those in the writings of William Faulkner and Gabriel García Márquez, at the same time finding a departure point in old Chinese literature and in oral tradition,” the citation declared, striking what seemed a careful balance after campaigns of vilification against other Chinese Nobel laureates.
Mo, born Guan Moye in 1955 to a farming family in eastern Shandong province, chose his pen-name while writing his first novel. Garrulous by nature, Mo has said the name, meaning “don’t speak”, was intended to remind him to hold his tongue lest he get himself into trouble and to mask his identity since he began writing while serving in the army.

Read more: http://www.telegraphindia.com/1121012/jsp/frontpage/story_16081696.jsp#.UHfq2G93bp8

Good heavens! A U-turn - Doctor changes his belief after out-of-body experience


New York, Oct. 11: A prominent scientist who had previously dismissed the possibility of the afterlife says he has reconsidered his belief after experiencing an out-of-body experience which has convinced him that heaven exists.
Dr Eben Alexander, a Harvard-educated neurosurgeon, fell into a coma for seven days in 2008 after contracting meningitis.
During his illness Dr Alexander says that the part of his brain which controls human thought and emotion “shut down” and that he then experienced “something so profound that it gave me a scientific reason to believe in consciousness after death”. In an essay for American magazine Newsweek, which he wrote to promote his book Proof of Heaven, Dr Alexander says he was met by a beautiful blue-eyed woman in a “place of clouds, big fluffy pink-white ones” and “shimmering beings”.
He continues: “Birds? Angels? These words registered later, when I was writing down my recollections. But neither of these words do justice to the beings themselves, which were quite simply different from anything I have known on this planet. They were more advanced. Higher forms.” The doctor adds that a “huge and booming like a glorious chant, came down from above, and I wondered if the winged beings were producing it. the sound was palpable and almost material, like a rain that you can feel on your skin but doesn’t get you wet.”
Dr Alexander says he had heard stories from patients who spoke of outer body experiences but had disregarded them as “wishful thinking” but has reconsidered his opinion following his own experience.
He added: “I know full well how extraordinary, how frankly unbelievable, all this sounds. Had someone even a doctor told me a story like this in the old days, I would have been quite certain that they were under the spell of some delusion.
“But what happened to me was, far from being delusional, as real or more real than any event in my life. That includes my wedding day and the birth of my two sons.”
He added: “I’ve spent decades as a neurosurgeon at some of the most prestigious medical institutions in our country.
“I know that many of my peers hold as I myself did to the theory that the brain, and in particular the cortex, generates consciousness and that we live in a universe devoid of any kind of emotion, much less the unconditional love that I now know God and the universe have toward us.
“But that belief, that theory, now lies broken at our feet. What happened to me destroyed it.”

By: MARK HUGHES, The Telegraph, Friday , October 12 , 2012
Link: http://www.telegraphindia.com/1121012/jsp/foreign/story_16081617.jsp#.UHhEsm93bp8

Thursday, October 11, 2012

Engineering the London 2012 Olympics opening ceremony

The London 2012 Olympics opening ceremony required a great deal of innovative — but hidden — engineering to make it work. Stephen Harris spoke to the engineers behind the spectacle.


The London 2012 Olympic Games showed off British engineering at its best, from the sweeping designs of the Olympic venues to the rising importance of sports technology in training. But engineering was also vital in bringing to life an opening ceremony that blew away the nation’s cynicism and set the mood for what some international commentators around the world have called ‘the best Olympics ever’.
The Olympics were a chance for a prominent British team of experts who have worked on opening ceremonies across the globe, from Athens in 2004 to last year’s Pan-Arab Games in Doha, to make a triumphant homecoming. ‘The UK is the home of large event production, particularly for ceremonies,’ said the ceremony’s technical director Piers Shepperd. ‘To do it in London in front of a home audience was obviously really good. There was a massive trepidation after Beijing, which was obviously a spectacular and huge ceremony, and we were very keen to try and do something different.’
Working on a home Olympics also enabled an unprecedented level of co-ordination between the ceremony’s technical team and the Games organisers from the very start. Shepperd was brought on board back in 2006 — several years before the stadium was even designed — to advise on what was needed to make the ceremony a success. He then worked closely with the engineers at Sir Robert McAlpine and Buro Happold to ensure that the stadium would be ready for whatever demands the artistic team came up with. In particular, this led to a roof design that could support a huge cable-net system (see box), which allowed the ceremony team to fly in scenery, lighting and performers with ease and saw the introduction of panels of light-emitting diodes (LEDs) behind each seat in the stadium, which turned the audience into a giant display screen with greater resolution than ever seen before.
Read more: http://www.theengineer.co.uk/in-depth/the-big-story/engineering-the-london-2012-olympics-opening-ceremony/1013640.article#ixzz290VFn9WG

Einstein quotes

The world is a dangerous place not because of people who do evil, but because of good people who look on and do nothing about it.
                       -- Albert Einstein

Sunday, October 07, 2012

Jharkhand Judicial officers face termination


Ranchi, May 28: The state government has decided to terminate the services of 10 judicial officers of various ranks through compulsory retirement on the recommendation of Jharkhand High Court for their “doubtful integrity and inefficiency”.
Chief minister Arjun Munda today approved the high court’s recommendation in anticipation of cabinet approval. The officials facing compulsory retirement will receive three months’ salary in lieu of prior notice.
This is the second time that the high court has embarked on a major “cleansing exercise” since coming into existence in 2000. Around 25 judicial officers were given marching orders in 2002. Thereafter, two to four officers have been axed annually over the years.
Last year, the government terminated four judicial officers.
Those facing termination now are principal judge of the family court in Dumka Mahesh Prasad Sinha, additional law adviser Indradev Mishra, civil judge, Ranchi, Murari Prasad Singh, secretary, District Legal Services Authority (DLSA) in Jamshedpur, Brijesh Bahadur Singh, special secretary, cabinet (vigilance) department, Pradeep Kumar Singh, chief judicial magistrate of Seraikela Kharsawan Indrasan Yadav, district and additional sessions judge of Giridih Nirmal Kumar Agarwal, secretary of DLSA in Sahebganj Ashok Kumar, additional chief judicial magistrate of Godda Sayed Mohammad Wasim, and subdivisional judicial magistrate, Deoghar (Madhupur), Radha Bhatnagar.
According to sources, the high court move was prompted by a letter from the Chief Justice of India in 2010, prompting an exercise of screening and weeding out deadwood as recommended by the Shetty Commission, which was implemented in the state in 2006. The recommendations guide the pay, perks and service conditions of judicial officials.
The Shetty Commission recommendations stipulate that judicial officers have to undergo three layers of screening after they attain the age of 50, every year. The first level of screening will be done annually for those between the ages of 50 and 55, the second level for those aged 55 to 58 and third for 58 to 60 years.
Jharkhand Service Rules section 74 (B) also states that any judicial official can be compulsorily retired on reaching 50 years of age or after completing 20 years of service if their service record is not up to the mark.
Around 130 of 410 judicial official across all ranks — from magistrates to district judges — fell under the bracket of 50 to 55 years when the high court began the exercise after constituting a committee of three judges in January this year. The high court sent the recommendations to the state government on May 17.
Sources said the disturbing feature was that some of the officers had faced serious charges from the very beginning of their service as was evident from their files and yet they continued in office.
Meanwhile, the chief minister also approved the transfer of two judicial officers — additional judicial commissioner (CBI court), Ranchi, Dinesh Chandra Rai, who has been transferred to Bokaro as family court principal judge and civil judge Ranchi Satya Prakash, who has been transferred as deputy registrar, Jhalsa.

(By: SUMAN K. SHRIVASTAVA, Source: The Telegraph 29 May 2012, http://www.telegraphindia.com/1120529/jsp/frontpage/story_15544253.jsp#.UHF3R5h3bp8)


NTPC world's 6th-largest CO2 emitter: Survey



New Delhi, August 13, 2012: India’s state-owned NTPC Ltd is the world’s sixth-largest polluter among a total of 40 large power generating companies, according to the Centre for Global Development (CGD), a Washington-based think tank. Also, NTPC has moved up the list of highest carbon dioxide (CO2)-emitting companies globally from seventh position in 2004 to sixth now.
The findings are part of CGD’s latest database on global carbon emissions, called Carbon Monitoring for Action (Carma). Four Chinese companies are among the top polluters, followed by a South African company at the fifth place. Carma clarified to Business Standard that while its database lists 20,000 corporate entities generating power globally, most of these small companies owning a single plant, NTPC should be compared only with the 40 large similar-sized companies.
The previous updated version of the database, when made public in 2008, had fuelled angry reactions from NTPC, with the then chairman, R S Sharma, rejecting the findings and threatening action against Carma.
The database says NTPC’s 27 power plants puffed out 191 million tonnes of CO2 to generate 209.7 billion units (BUs) of electricity in 2009, the latest year for which data has been considered by Carma. More, 20 of the 27 units run by NTPC have been included in the ‘Red Alert’ category, signifying a ‘dirty’ plant for high CO2 emission.
NTPC, as expected, has again rejected what Carma has said. “NTPC does not agree with the understanding that NTPC is the sixth-largest polluter, as absolute emission cannot be a criteria for any conclusion related to greenhouse gas (GHG) emission, as different companies across the globe have different portfolio mix,” the company said in response to a detailed questionnaire from Business Standard.
The company argues that according to Carma’s own database, NTPC is the only company among the top 10 power producers with a 100 per cent fossil fuel-based portfolio. It also says when compared with other companies on the basis of emission intensity (quantum of CO2 emitted per unit of power generated), NTPC stands out as most efficient among the top 10 generators, with a more than 90 per cent fossil-fuel mix.
The Carma database, in fact, shows that in terms of intensity, NTPC ranks eighth among the top 40 power producing companies globally. NTPC emitted 915 kg of CO2 per megawatt hour (MwH) of power produced. China Resources Power Holdings tops the list as least efficient generator with 1,010 kg of CO2 emission per MwH of power production.
Carma says for India, most of its reported data represents publicly disclosed figures by the government. Data on Indian power plants has been sourced from the Central Electricity Authority (CEA) under the power ministry.
NTPC, however, alleges that Carma’s emission figures for NTPC plants do not match with the CEA statistics. The company expects its carbon footprint to come down, due to use of super-critical power plants and advanced gas turbines. It is also working on readjusting its fuel mix by adding green energy capacity, it said.
Overall, India is found to be the world's third-largest CO2 polluting nation, after China with annual emission of 2,838 mt and the US with 2,315 mt. India emitted 699.4 mt of CO2 in 2009. Carma has put 568, or 27 per cent, of India’s 2,109 power plants in the ‘Red Alert’ category. After India, Russia and Japan occupy the fourth and fifth places.
Among Indian states, Uttar Pradesh tops the list with annual CO2 emission of 84.3 mt, followed by Maharashtra with 70 mt, Andhra Pradesh with 65.8 mt, Chhattisgarh with 61 mt, Orissa with 61 mt and Gujarat with 59 mt.
Among Indian cities, Singrauli in Madhya Pradesh is the largest polluter, with 60 mt of CO2 emissions, followed by Renukoot and Obra in Uttar Pradesh, and Korba, Raigarh and Bilaspur in Chhattisgarh. Among power companies in India, NTPC tops the chart, followed by the state power utilities of Maharashtra and Gujarat at second and third place.

Wednesday, October 03, 2012

Parents keep 17-year-old alive through book of poems



Sumati Yengkhom, TNN Sep 11, 2012
KOLKATA: Rhiju Basak had promised to present his parents with the first copy of his book of poems. Rhiju's dream of having his works published will be fulfilled on September 12, his birthday, but his parents will never get his signature on it. The 17-year-old's lifeless body was found floating at Rabindra Sarovar on February 10 this year.
"A bunch of lies" is how the young poet described his writings, arguing that writers rarely reflected the reality in their works, recall his parents. So, that is what the collection of 158 poems written by the La Martiniere for Boys (LMB) student has been titled. It will be launched on Wednesday at Oxford Book Store by Sunil Gangopadhyay. The foreword has been written by none other than Amitav Ghosh.

http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2012-09-11/kolkata/33761711_1_poems-frankfurt-book-fair-darkness

Monday, March 19, 2012

Sleeping for a living in five-star hotels

From Rediff.com

A woman in China has been hired to stay in five-star hotels and rate the services offered by the staff.

Zhuang was selected as one of three final winners out of 7,800 candidates and started working for Qunar as a Professional Hotel Test Sleeper in March 2010.She has stayed in more than 200 hotels until now.
(Follow the title link to read more)

Friday, March 09, 2012

No country for women

To be killed before you are born is inexplicable. For the 10 million girl children who were brutally killed due to selective abortions [after pre-natal screening between 2001 and 2011], the first blow landed before they were born. ABC News did an expose last year where it claimed that a staggering 40 million women have gone 'missing'. The result? The sex ratio has dipped to 918 girls for every 1000 males in 2011 from 927 girls in 2001.
For the girls who make the cut, it's not over, gendercide awaits. India has among the highest rates of girl children being killing after birth in the world (by women who can't afford pre-natal screening). It's a girl; three words that sound the death knell. After carrying their babies for nine months, mothers or midwives will put an end to the 'burden' by slamming their heads against the wall, burying them alive or stuffing a wet cloth in their mouths. Survive this and malnourishment follows, felling more. Around 2.5 million children die in India every year, that's one in five deaths globally, with girls being 50 per cent more likely to die. Dowry is cited as the main reason for boys being preferred to girls.
One of the biggest challenges of being a woman is the feeling that they are burden to the family and must be quickly unloaded to any suitor. Minors being married before they are physically and emotionally mature is the norm. According to a UNICEF report 'State of the world's children 2012: children in an urban world' almost 22 per cent of women have children before they turn 18! Only 41 per of them initiated early breastfeeding, which is crucial for mental and physical nourishment resulting in 48 per cent of children under the age of five being stunted.
The unfortunate part is that selective abortions, gendercide and high infant mortality rates for girls below five are a widely reported phenomena, and the government has tried to address these issues. But, discrimination and a nation obsessed with male children for hundreds of years will not be easy to set right. This is not just in villages where illiteracy is widespread and discrimination runs generations deep. Urban, well-educated families also behave in the same fashion. One of Delhi's districts has a sex ratio of just 836 females per 1,000 males.
Being a girl child in India must be a constant looking over the shoulder and crawl through the trenches. While literacy rates are abysmally low for men and women, the fairer sex is worse off. According to a UNICEF report the national literacy rate of girls over seven years is 54 per cent against 75 per cent for boys. Girls in the Northern states are worse off, between 33 to 50 per cent.

Thursday, March 08, 2012

Massive solar eruptions may hit Earth



The strongest geomagnetic storm in more than six years could affect airline routes, power grids and satellites, the U.S. Space Weather Prediction Center said.

The sun unleashed two massive X-class solar flares on March 6, 2012. The flare erupted from the giant active sunspot AR1429

Sunday, March 04, 2012

Internet firms agree to install 'do-not-track' browser button

Washington, Feb 24 (ANI): A coalition of Internet firms, including US-based Google, have agreed to support a "do-not-track" button to be installed in web browsers that would help protect the privacy of computer users across the globe.
The 'do-not-track' feature has been announced as part of the White House's call for Congress to pass a "Consumer Privacy Bill of Rights" that will allow Internet users greater control over how their personal information is collected and used online.
For more than a year, Internet browser companies have resisted embedding the button.
But slowly, various browsing companies have adopted the feature, including Mozilla with its Firefox browser, Microsoft with Internet Explorer and Apple with its Mountain Lion operating system.
People who clicked on the button, however, were still being tracked because advertisers and tracking companies hadn't agreed to honor the system, The Wall Street Journal reports.
According to the Digital Advertising Alliance, which represents over 400 companies, firms will now have to begin adopting and honoring the system within nine months.
But the new do-not-track button is not going to stop all Web tracking, the report said.
The companies have agreed to stop using the data about people's Web browsing habits to customize ads, and have agreed not to use the data for employment, credit, health-care or insurance purposes.
But the data can still be used for some purposes such as "market research" and "product development" and can still be obtained by law enforcement officers, the paper said.
The do-not-track button also wouldn't block companies such as Facebook from tracking their members through "Like" buttons and other functions. (ANI)

Frenchman sues Google over streetview image of him urinating in yard

Melbourne, Mar 3 (ANI, Yahoo news): A French man is taking legal action against Google for making him the butt of jokes in his village after the company's Street View service put on the internet a picture of him urinating in his garden, his lawyer has said.
"He discovered the existence of this photo after noticing that he had become an object of ridicule," the Herald Sun quoted lawyer Jean-Noel Bouillaud as saying.
The slightly hazy picture shows an individual relieving himself in a garden in the village in the west-central Maine-et-Loire department.
"My client lives in a tiny hamlet where everyone recognised him," Bouillaud said.
He further said that his client was on his own property and the gate to his garden was closed at the time the photo was taken.
The man is suing the internet giant in a court in the city of Angers for infringement of his privacy and of his right not to have his photo published without his accord.
He also wants the offending photograph to be withdrawn from the site.
Google's lawyer, Christophe Bigot, said the lawsuit against his company was "implausible."
Street View allows users to take a ground level panoramic view of some locations on Google Maps, based on still photographs taken by specially equipped vehicles. (ANI)

A good picture from Yahoo pics of the week :03 Mar 2012


A woman dries her saree, a traditional cloth used for women's clothing, after washing it on the banks of river Tawi in Jammu March 3, 2012. REUTERS/Mukesh Gupta

Interesting facts

1. A lady named Marthe Odile Charton (C), 100, celebrated her 25th Leap Day birthday, in Ingersheim near Colmar, Eastern France, February 29, 2012. Odile is a "leaper" born on February 29,1912 in Ingersheim. REUTERS/Vincent Kessler

2. Boys between the ages of 7 and 18 in Myanmar are traditionally sent by their family to experience the life of a monk for a short span of time. REUTERS/Navesh Chitrakar

(Source: Yahoo pictures of the week March 3,2012)

US special forces stationed in India, reveals Pentagon

TOI, 2 Mar 2012

WASHINGTON: US special forces teams are currently stationed in five South Asian countries including India as part of the counter-terrorism cooperation with these nations, a top Pentagon commander has disclosed.

These teams have been deployed by US Pacific Command as part of its effort to enhance their counter-terrorism capabilities, in particular in the maritime domain, Admiral Robert Willard, the PACOM Commander said on Thursday.

"We have currently special forces assist teams - Pacific assist teams is the term - laid down in Nepal, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Maldives, as well as India," Willard told lawmakers at a Congressional hearing in response to a question on co-operation with India on counter-terrorism issues.

"We are working very closely with India with regard to their counter-terrorism capabilities and in particular on the maritime domain but also government to government, not necessarily DOD (department of defence) but other agencies assisting them in terms of their internal counter-terror and counterinsurgency challenges," Willard said.

(To read the full report, follow the title link to TOI news article.)

Saturday, March 03, 2012

One who doesn't earn Rs50000 per month, is a poor by Persi standard

Not many Indians will qualify to be above poverty line if the Persi standard, as set by Bombay Persi Panchayet, is followed in differentiating 'poor' Indians from 'rich' Indians.

See this news that came online at TOI today (3 Mar 2012)
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MUMBAI: The Bombay Parsi Punchayet on Friday told the Bombay High Court that it considers a Parsi who earns under Rs 50,000 a month to be "poor" and hence eligible for allotment of a flat at subsidised rent.

A division bench of Justices P B Majmudar and Ramesh Dhanuka was hearing a petition filed by Rohinton Taraporewala against BPP's president Dinshaw Mehta and other trustees.

Taraporewala, who is in his 60s, lives in Tarapur. He has contended in his petition that he is "poor and eligible'' for housing, but BPP has allotted flats at Panthaky Baug in Andheri to people who are "richer" than him. He has also said that he and his wife are ailing and require to live in Mumbai to avail of medical treatment.

When the matter came up for hearing, Taraporewala's lawyer was not present. BPP advocate Percy Gandhi said a copy of the petition had not been served to his client. "He is not poor and has moved court because he was not allotted a flat at Panthaky Baug. He is very rich and has acres and acres of land. These flats are for the poor and needy,'' said Gandhi.

To a query from the judges as to who is defined as poor by the BPP, Gandhi replied, "A person earning income below Rs 50,000 a month is regarded as poor.'' Justice Majmudar remarked, "We have not come across any poor Parsi."

On October 15, 2009 the HC allowed BPP to sell 108 flats at Panthaky Baug at rates approved by the Charity Commissioner to cross-subsidise housing for needy Parsis. Some 300 flats are to be constructed and given on a merit-rating scheme.

Gandhi submitted that the108 flats "are also to be also sold to poor and needy Parsis'' and as Taraporewala is "not poor", he was not allotted a flat. Directing that a copy of the petition be served on BPP, the judges have adjourned the matter for two weeks.

Friday, February 24, 2012

BSNL launches cheap tablets in Rs3250 - Rs13500 range

Yahoo India news, 24 Feb 2012

BSNL has launched three tablets including two 7 inch resistive screen based tabs with Android 2.3 operating system while the third tablet comes with an 8 inch capacitive touchscreen.

Made by Noida based company - Pantel, the tablets will be sold with discounted data plans from BSNL. The three tablets are priced at Rs 3,250, Rs 10,999 and Rs 13,500.

The cheapest model is Panta Tpad IS 701r which is priced at Rs 3,250. Notably, Aakash is priced at just Rs 2500. However, Tpad has better specification than the Datawind's low cost tablet.

Panta Tpad is a WiFi only tablet with Android 2.3 operating system, it has a 1 GHz processor (ARM11 IMAP210) clubbed with 256 MB RAM. The tablet also offers HDMI port through which it can be connected to a TV. Its 7 inch resistive touch screen comes with 800x600 resolution and 16:9 aspect ratio.
pagination

The tablet has a 3000 mAh battery and 2 GB internal memory which can be expanded through micro SD card. The tablet also has a VGA front facing camera for video calling. While Panta Tpad IS 701r has the BSNL branding, the other two tablets images do not have.

The second tablet is named 'Panta Tpad_ws704c'. It has the same specification as its cheapest cousin (701r) but offers added 3G connectivity which supports both CDMA/EVDO and GSM, inbuilt A-GPS, Accelerometer and Bluetooth. It also comes with a 2 megapixel rear camera and also has bigger 512 MB RAM for faster performance.

The costliest amongst the three is the Tpad WS802C which has an 8 inch capacitive screen. It comes with a faster 1.2 GHz processor and 512 MB RAM. The internal memory is also bigger at 4 GB. Rest of the features like GPS, camera and Bluetooth are same as the 704C.

Kudankulam anti-nuclear activist tells PM to prove NGO-funded charge or quit

Yahoo India news, 24 Feb 2012

Kudankulam (Tamil Nadu), Feb.24 (ANI): Anti-nuclear activist S.P. Uday Kumar on Friday criticised Prime Minister Manmohan Singh over the his statement that NGOs based in the United States and in some Scandinavian countries are fuelling the Kudankulam nuclear plant protests.
In interviews given to various television channels, Kumar asked Dr. Singh to prove his charge or quit office.
"The Prime Minister should take back his statement. If the Prime Minister can't prove his charge then he should step down. The Prime Minister is not an elected PM, but a nominated one, that's why he is insulting the people of India," claimed Kumar.
"It is nonsense to say that NGOs' from the US and Scandinavian countries are funding the Kudankulam protest," he said.
"The Prime Minister, who is the head of the country, can't make such remarks. He has no sympathy. Lakhs of people are struggling and instead of acknowledging, he is accusing us of receiving money. We are not receiving money from any NGO," said Kumar.
"His ministerial colleague Narayansamy said the same thing. Why can't he produce some evidence to prove his charge? The Prime Minister insults the people of the country," Kumar said.
Speaking to NDTV"s Science Editor Pallava Bagla during an interview for the Science magazine, Dr. Singh said: "What"s happening in Kudankulam...the atomic energy programme has got into difficulties because these NGOs, mostly I think based in the United States, don"t appreciate the need for our country to increase the energy supply."
The Prime Minister has also blamed these NGOs for opposing genetically modified foods and the use of biotechnology to increase food production in the country.
"Biotechnology has enormous potential and in due course of time we must make use of genetic engineering technologies to increase the productivity of our agriculture. But there are controversies. There are NGOs, often funded from the United States and the Scandinavian countries, which are not fully appreciative of the development challenges that our country faces," Dr Singh said.
The Rs.13, 000-crore Kudankulam Nuclear Power Plant (KNPP) is located in Tirunelveli district of Tamil Nadu.
Being built with Russian collaboration, the plant is expected to provide energy-starved India respite from power shortage.
The Indo-Russian nuclear plant joint venture, however, has run into trouble, with activists and locals staging massive protests citing safety concerns in the wake of the Fukushima disaster that took place in Japan on March 11, 2011.
The frequent protests have stalled the commissioning of two 1000-megawatt nuclear reactors.
Several rounds of talks between a Central Government-appointed expert panel and representatives of villagers opposing the plant have failed to end the standoff.
The villagers say they fear for their lives and their safety in case of a nuclear accident, as also concerns over the long-term impact it would have on the population in the area.
Worried over the scale of protests against the plant, the PM had urged Tamil Nadu Chief Minister J Jayalalithaa to support the project and had assured her that no safety features would be compromised at the plant.
While international experts have signed off on the facilities of the plant, deeming them strong enough to withstand an earthquake or a tsunami, the country"s nuclear watchdog - the Atomic Energy Regulatory Board - has suggested that more security checks are needed at the plant. (ANI)

Friday, February 17, 2012

Pvt Channel Cameras Banned in K'taka Assembly After Assembly Scam Expose

From yahoo news, 17 Feb 2012

Little else may bring out moments of collective hypocrisy-hysteria like our attitudes to matters of the powerful and the sexual. In other current words, politicians or porn. Are parts of this nation being remarkably consistent in the hysteria and the hype?
India banned the most recent adapatation of Stieg Larsson's The Girl with the Dragon tattoo, a film for its adult scenes of rape and torture. Now it is also keen to go ahead in the latest porngate and ban cameras of private channels inside the Soudha or State Assembly. So shooting the messenger, what in this case has arguably not come across as an irresponsible media moment ?With what rationale? So the MLAs should not feel watched while at work ? Who will catch the shirk? The state's own cameras? A case of cracking down on the cameras and the extracurricular passions of members representing the people of Karnataka ? What do you think?And this may have opened the vault of political hypocrisy but was this the worst pornographic sex on the sly type scandal in India? See this next video and decide. And in the video after that Prasoon Joshi probably hits the nail on the head about audiences while actually talking about Indian cinema here.He says what Indians are is very very confused.

Boy genius joined college at age 8, graduated at 9 and wrote book at 14

Fromm NDTV.com, 17 Feb 2012

The one thing 14-year-old Moshe Kai Cavalin dislikes is being called a genius. All he did, after all, was enroll in college at age 8 and earn his first of two Associate of Arts degrees from East Los Angeles Community College at age 9, graduating with a perfect 4.0 grade point average.

Now at 14, he has also published the English version of his book "We Can Do".


Read more at: http://www.ndtv.com/article/world/boy-genius-joined-college-at-age-8-graduated-at-9-176566