Month: May 2015

  • Belgian footballer Mertens dies after collapsing on pitch

    Belgian footballer Mertens dies after collapsing on pitch

    BRUSSELS (TIP): Belgium under-21 international Gregory Mertens died on April 30, three days after collapsing with heart failure during a match, a spokesman for his club, Lokeren, said.

    The 24-year-old defender had been in a coma since going into cardiac arrest early in a reserve team game on Monday.

    Club spokesman Herman Van De Putte said that his condition continued to worsen and the player’s family had agreed with doctors to switch off the life support system.

    “Much too soon must we bid farewell to Gregory Mertens,” the club said in a statement. “We are a football club. Everyone in and around the club breathes football. But suddenly something happens where we realise football is just football.

    “Today is such a time … The medical team did all they could to save Gregory but in the end had to recognise their impotence. Gregory passed away today about 4:30 PM (1430 GMT).

    “His family were able to say their farewells.”

    Mertens, who joined top-flight Lokeren last summer after nearly 100 appearances for Cercle Bruges, collapsed 15 minutes into the game at Racing Genk and despite lengthy efforts to bring him round doctors quickly said his survival needed a “miracle”.

    The death of a young man his club described as making himself “indispensable” while never losing his “quiet modesty” shocked many leading figures across European soccer.

    Chelsea’s Belgium international goalkeeper Thibaut Courtois tweeted in Dutch: “RIP Gregory Mertens! Much strength to family and friends.”

    Fabrice Muamba, who as a 23-year-old nearly died during an FA Cup match in England three years ago, tweeted:
    “Horrible news that Gregory Mertens has passed away, only 24 years old. #RIP.”

    A former England Under-21 international, Muamba’s heart stopped for over an hour during a televised quarter-final for Bolton Wanderers at Tottenham Hotspur.

    He survived and retired from the game, drawing attention to the health risks young players can face.

    “Shockingly sad,” former England striker and television presenter Gary Lineker tweeted after news of Mertens’ death.

    Manchester City said: “Our thoughts are with the friends and family of
    @KSCLokeren’s Gregory Mertens at this sad time.”

  • Indian hockey team gears up for Japan Test series

    NEW DELHI (TIP): The Indian men’s hockey team is gearing up for the upcoming Test series against Japan, which will be held between May 3-9 in Bhubaneswar.

    Practicing hard at the MDC National Stadium in the ongoing preparation camp, both players and coaching staff are working on various team-combinations and strategies to bring maximum performance out of them.

    Speaking post the practice session, coach Paul van Ass said, “Our easy-going days are over and we are working harder in this preparation camp. We are rectifying our loop-holes, especially in the defence-line. We are reviewing our previous performances and working on various aspects.

    “We are trying new players in the national team in the tournament and will give maximum opportunities to all the players to perform on the field. Though Japan is lower ranked to us, we are not taking them lightly. In this era of modern hockey, you can’t take any team easy.

    “I remember once Japan defeated The Netherlands in a high-rated tournament. We are studying their tactics and making strategies to counter them. We are expecting a good contest in Bhubaneswar.”

    Captain Sardar Singh said, “The preparation camp is going good and we are working as per our Coach’s strategies. We have few issues in our defence-line as we concede goals in the last minutes. So our Coaching staff is working on that and solving those issues.

    “We all are focusing on implementation of strategies on the field, which is very important for us. We have brought back few young players in the team and we are expecting good results from them.

  • Indian tech start-ups woo talent back from America – Offer massive perks

    Indian tech start-ups woo talent back from America – Offer massive perks

    India’s IT industry has long been seen as a back-office backwater, even by its own engineers who started moving abroad in their droves in the 1970s. After losing top engineering talent for years to America’s tech heartland of Silicon Valley, India is luring them back as an e-commerce boom sparks a thriving start-up culture, unprecedented pay, and perks including free healthcare for in-laws.

    The e-commerce sector, led by companies such as Flipkart and Snapdeal, attracted more than $5 billion of investment last year, Morgan Stanley says, compared with less than $2 billion in 2013.

    That growth is fuelling the hunt for talent to drive the next stage of expansion – for many, an initial public offering or a push into overseas markets.

    “The appetite for finding engineering talent … is great,” said George Kaszacs of Silicon Valley-based headhunters Riviera Partners, who helps Indian startups scout for potential hires.

    India’s biggest e-commerce company, Flipkart (IPO-FLPK.N), recently hired two senior executives from Google Inc (GOOGL.O) in California, both engineers of Indian origin, for its headquarters in Bengaluru in southern India.

    Flipkart did not disclose their pay, but headhunters say remuneration packages can reach $1 million over 3-4 years.

    Headhunter Kaszacs said several factors are drawing Indians back home, including the chance to join a fast-growing start-up. Joining bonuses, stock options and other perks were also helping.

  • App Launched in California to record possible police misconduct

    App Launched in California to record possible police misconduct

    A California civil liberties group launched a mobile application on April 30, that will let bystanders record cell phone videos of possible cases of police misconduct and then quickly save the footage to the organization’s computer servers.

    The California chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union said the app will send the video to the organization and preserve it even if a phone is seized by police or destroyed.

    The launch of the ACLU’s “Mobile Justice CA” app comes as law enforcement agencies face scrutiny over the use of lethal force, especially against African-Americans, following several high-profile deaths of unarmed black men in encounters with police over the last year in the United States.

    “It’s critical that people understand what is being done by police officers, because what is being done is being done in the name of the public,” said Hector Villagra, executive director of the ACLU of Southern California.

    The app is targeted at residents of the most populous U.S. state, but ACLU chapters have launched similar mobile apps in at least five other states, including New York, Missouri and Mississippi over the last three years.

    It also sends an alert to anyone with the app who might be in the area, giving them an opportunity to go to the location and observe, the ACLU said.

  • Roswell Park spinoff, Indian pharma company start joint venture in New York

    Roswell Park spinoff, Indian pharma company start joint venture in New York

    A major Indian pharmaceutical company is forming a joint venture with a startup life-sciences company in Buffalo that grew out of research conducted at Roswell Park Cancer Institute.

    AMI Organics, which has two manufacturing sites in the western Indian state of Gujarat, is investing $2 million in the joint venture with Photolitec, the Roswell Park spinoff. The investment and the joint venture will help Photolitec complete the costly clinical trials required to determine if its cancer treatments are safe and effective before they can be brought to market.

    “It is good, not only for Photolitec, but I think it is fantastic for Western New York,” said Ravindra Pandey, a Roswell Park scientist and Photolitec’s founder.

    The newly formed company is expected to open with five or six employees in space on the Buffalo Niagara Medical Campus sometime in the next few months, according to AMI Organics and Photolitec officials, who met in Buffalo this week to close the deal.

    Pandey founded Photolitec in 2010. The startup rents space from Roswell Park, but by the end of this month will move its five employees to the Cleveland BioLabs building on the Medical Campus. The company has raised $5 million from Hisun Pharma, a Chinese drug company, and $1.6 million in National Institutes of Health.

    Photolitec is focusing on commercializing two compounds for the treatment and detection of cancer that were developed by Pandey and other researchers at Roswell Park in collaboration with the University at Buffalo and the University of Michigan. Photolitec licensed from Roswell Park the rights to commercialize the compounds

  • Indian American owned Intelliswift acquires Magagnini Network

    Indian American owned Intelliswift acquires Magagnini Network

    Intelliswift Software, Inc. a leading software solutions company, announced the acquisition of Magagnini Network. This is a great opportunity for Magagnini’s marquee clientele to leverage Intelliswift’s global foot print and broad portfolio of service offerings.

     

    “We are truly excited to become part of the Intelliswift Team. Magagnini Network is a national provider of Enterprise Business & Technology Solutions, and now our continued commitment to excellence will be strengthened by Intelliswift’s ability to partner with customers across different verticals. Our teams and processes will excel with Intelliswift’s joint leadership”, said Johnny Magagnini, CEO of Magagnini Network.

     

    Pat Patel, CEO of Intelliswift stated, “John comes with over two decades of technology staffing experience building his career at companies like Robert half and Mat Systems, leading on to co-founding TechRP (now Latitude 36). After growing the company to multi-million dollar business, he eventually ventured out to form Magagnini Network. John and team have been successfully servicing large and mid-sized customers in the Bay Area including Federal Reserve Bank, Genentech, Davita and others. We are delighted to have the Magagnini team join the Intelliswift Family.”

  • India won’t provoke conflict, befitting reply if attacked at Pakistan border: Rajnath Singh

    India on Thursday April 30, said it will never “provoke” a conflict at the border with Pakistan but will not back off if there is any attack, asserting a befitting reply will be given.

     

    “India will never provoke conflict by being the first to open fire across the borders but will never back off. Our forces will give a befitting reply to shelling and gunfire from across the border,” Home Minister Rajnath Singh said addressing a conference of BSF and security officials in New Delhi. Singh was speaking in the context of ceasefire violations by Pakistan along the Line of Control (LoC) and International Border, which is guarded by the Border Security Force (BSF).

     

    The Home Minister also said his government’s policy of BSF giving a befitting reply to any unprovoked firing by Pakistan has gone down well in the country. On other issues, Singh said that in order to enhance the vigil and security at India’s riverine borders along Pakistan and Bangladesh, the government has sanctioned nine new ‘floating’ border posts to the force.

     

    While six of the border posts, self-sustained troops and weapon carrying vessels, will be deployed along the Sunderbans area along the Indo-Bangladesh border, three similar floating platforms have been sanctioned for the BSF along the shallow sea and marshy area of Rann of Kutch in Gujarat. Officials said these new vessels would be made and procured from Indian ship and vessel making firms, hopefully, within this financial year. At present there are about five such vessels at both these border areas.

     

    The BSF is the mandated border guarding force for these two important Indian frontiers. “We have to care about both land and coastal security. It is a fact that only a secure nation can progress and same is true for India.

     

    “I have seen the BSF working very closely in these areas and I felt there was a dearth of floating BOPs (border out posts) here and hence we have sanctioned new ones,” Rajnath said while inaugurating the forces’ ‘Golden Jubilee’ seminar here.

     

    The one-day seminar, held to commemorate the forces’ 50 years of raising this year, is being held on the theme of “border management in India–challenges and options”.

     

    He assured the force of the Home Ministry’s commitment to provide the force with latest weaponry and equipment as he lauded the personnel for undertaking welfare activities and development works for the people residing in the vicinity of the borders.

     

    The Home Minister, who had recently visited the border areas, said he could get the feel as “how difficult and hard” the duties of the BSF men were. “I could see that at times the jawans could not take bath for close to 24 hours and for sometime food was not available. But, I can say this with pride that they are doing their duty with utmost courage and dedication. I salute them,” he said.

     

    Singh said the government also wants to enhance the socio-economic levels of the people living along the border areas as they have a strong “emotional attachment” with the country that they do not run away from the place of habitation even during troubled times. “Since Independence, efforts have been made for them (border population). Funds are also given but much more needs to be done for them,” he said, adding, “even in adversity” many people want to remain at their places only.

     

    He expressed happiness that funds allocated during last fiscal for border area development have been utilised to the maximum. “There will always be some fund crunch and I will keep trying to get more allocations. But the Finance Ministry also has some limits…we will have to understand that,” he said.

     

    The Home Minister said he would favour more and more studies and research to be conducted on issues of border management as he assured BSF that their proposal to set up a new ‘institute of border management and strategic studies’ would be favourably looked into. He also asked the country’s largest border guarding force to use modern technology in guarding Indian frontiers as it was not possible to totally secure them through human deployment. Singh also praised other forces like ITBP, Assam Rifles, Coast Guard and Army for securing Indian borders effectively.

  • Nazi museum opens at old party headquarters in Munich

    In 1930, Adolf Hitler established the headquarters of the National Socialist German Workers‘ Party in an upscale part of Munich. On Thursday April 30, the 70th anniversary of the city’s liberation by US troops, the same site saw the long-awaited opening of the museum on the Nazi movement’s history in and impact on the town where it was born.

     

    Political leaders stood alongside American war veterans and Holocaust survivors to open the “Documentation Center for the History of National Socialism.” The museum’s director, Winfried Nerdinger, himself the son of a local resistance fighter, admitted that it had taken far too long for the city to open up about its toxic legacy.

     

    Munich had a hard time with this than all the other cities in Germany because it is also more tainted than any other city. This is where it all began,” said Nerdinger.

  • Winter freezes US economy in first quarter

    Winter freezes US economy in first quarter

    WASHINGTON (TIP): US economic growth braked more sharply than expected in the first quarter as harsh weather dampened consumer spending and energy companies struggling with low prices slashed spending, but there are signs activity is picking up.

    US gross domestic product expanded at an only 0.2 per cent annual rate, the commerce department said on Wednesday. That was a big step down from the fourth quarter’s 2.2 per cent pace and marked the weakest reading in a year.

    A strong dollar and a now-resolved labor dispute at normally busy west coast ports also slammed growth, the government said. The weak growth, though probably temporary, reduces the chances of a June interest rate hike from the Federal Reserve.

    “A stalling of US economic growth at the start of the year rules out any imminent hiking of interest rates by the Fed,” said Chris Williamson, chief economist at Markit in London.

    Economists polled by Reuters had forecast the economy expanding at a 1.0 per cent rate.

    The dollar fell to an eight-week low against a basket of currencies after the report. The yield on the benchmark 10-year US treasury note retreated from a six-week high.

    The sharp growth slowdown is probably not a true reflection of the economy’s health, given the role of temporary factors such as the weather and the ports dispute.

    The first-quarter GDP snapshot was released just hours before Fed officials conclude a two-day policy meeting. Policymakers at the US central bank are expected to acknowledge the softer growth, but shrug it off as temporary in a statement they will issue after their gathering.

    While there are signs the economy is pulling out of the soft patch, data on home building, manufacturing, retail sales and business investment suggest the rebound will lack the vigor seen last year when the economy snapped back after being blindsided by cold weather.

    At the start of this year, many economists believed the Fed would raise interest rates from near zero in June. Now, most of the guessing centers around September.

    Hibernating consumers

    The government did not quantify the impact of the weather, the strong dollar, lower energy prices and the ports disruptions on growth last quarter.

    Economists, however, estimate unusually cold weather in February chopped off as much as half a percentage point, with the port disruptions shaving off a further 0.3 percentage point.

    The weather impact was evident in weakness in consumer spending. Growth in consumer spending, which accounts for more than two-thirds of US economic activity, slowed to a 1.9 per cent rate. That was the slowest in a year and followed a brisk 4.4 per cent pace in the fourth quarter.

    The sharp moderation in consumer spending came even though households enjoyed huge savings from a big drop in gasoline prices. Consumers boosted their savings to $727.8 billion from $603.4 billion in the fourth quarter.

    Construction also took a hit from the weather, while lower energy prices, which have cut into domestic oil production, undermined business investment.

    Spending on nonresidential structures, which includes oil exploration and well drilling, tumbled at a 23.1 per cent rate. That was the fastest pace of decline in four years and marked the first contraction since the first quarter of 2013.

    The decline in nonresidential structures was driven by mining, exploration, shafts and wells, which plunged at a 48.7 per cent pace in the first quarter.

    “The downward pressure on profits, the large drop in oil-related investment and the strong dollar are holding back the US economy,” said Gad Levanon a managing director at the Conference Board in New York.

    Schlumberger, the world’s No. 1 oil-field services provider, has slashed its capital spending plans for this year by about $500 million to $2.5 billion, while competitor Halliburton cut its by about 15 per cent to$2.8 billion.

    While companies have not given a time frame, economists believe the bulk of the spending cuts were front-loaded into the first quarter, and they expect energy-related investment cuts will present less of a drag on growth in the April-June quarter.

    The dollar, which gained 4.5 per cent against the currencies of the United States’ main trade partners in the first quarter, weighed on trade, as did the West Coast ports dispute. Trade subtracted 1.25 percentage points from first-quarter GDP growth.

    The dollar is expected to remain an economic headwind in the quarters ahead. Economists estimate it will reduce growth by 0.6 percentage point this year.

    There was a surprise increase in inventory accumulation, which added 0.74 percentage point to GDP growth.

    Inventories increased $110.3 billion from$80.0 billion in the fourth quarter. But the jump suggests inventories will weigh on growth in the second quarter.

  • Gove eases incorporation of business, process to take just 1 form

    NEW DELHI (TIP): Entrepreneurs keen on setting up new enterprises will be able to incorporate one by filing just one form starting May 1 against eight separate forms earlier, as part of the government’s drive to make it easier to do business in the country.

    The corporate affairs ministry will from May 1 have an integrated company incorporation form to make compliance and reporting easier and convenient for corporates. “Name availability, allotment of Director Identification Number (DIN), company incorporation and commencement of business will now be possible through a single form,” said a senior ministry official who sought anonymity. The new form, called INC-29, will be available on the MCA website. This is part of the government’s drive to improve India’s ranking on the globally tracked parameter of ease of doing business. This is a priority area for PM Narendra Modi, who has made it a personal mission to improve India’s scores on this parameter.

  • Maruti Suzuki sales surge 27 per cent to 1,11,748 units

    NEW DELHI: Country’s largest carmaker Maruti Suzuki India (MSI) reported a 29.6 per cent rise in total sales in April at 1,11,748 units against 86,196 units in the corresponding period last year.

    The company said its domestic sales increased by 27.3 per cent during the month to 1,00,709 units against 79,119 units in April 2014. Sales of mini segment cars, including, Alto and WagonR, rose 35.9 per cent to 35,403 units compared with 26,043 units in the year-ago month, MSI said in a statement.

    The company said sales of the compact segment comprising Swift, Estilo, Ritz, Dzire rose by 8.7 per cent to 42,297 units in April this year against 38,926 units last year.

    MSI said sales of its compact sedan Dzire Tour rose over two-fold during the month under review to 1,826 units against 741 units in April 2014.The sales of company’s mid-sized sedan Ciaz, which was launched in October, stood at 4,662 units. The company had sold 76 units of SX4 sedan in April 2014. There was no sale of premium sedan Kizashi during the month.Sales of utility vehicles, including Gypsy, Grand Vitara and Ertiga, declined by 11.2 per cent at 4,452 units in April this year from 5,011 units last year.

    Sales of vans, Omni and Eeco, rose by 45 per cent to 12,069 units in April compared with 8,322 units last year. Exports during the month rose by 56 per cent to 11,039 units compared with 7,077 units in April 2014, MSI said.

     

  • Samsung’s profit sinks 39%as mobile profit shrinks

    SEOUL (TIP): Samsung Electronics Co. said its first-quarter net income has plunged 39%as the smartphone business saw its profit shrink to less than half from a year earlier.

    The company reported Wednesday that its January-March income was 4.63 trillion won ($4.35 billion), compared with 7.49 trillion won one year earlier.

    That was lower than analysts’ consensus of 4.97 trillion won, according to financial data provider Factset.

    Sales fell 12% from a year earlier to 47.12 trillion won while operating income dropped 30% to 5.98 trillion won, in line with Samsung’s earnings preview earlier this month.

    The wider-than-expected drop in net profit was due to a big profit plunge in Samsung’s mobile business. The maker of Galaxy smartphones said its mobile division generated 2.74 trillion won in quarterly profit, compared with 6.43 trillion won a year earlier.

    Analysts estimate Samsung sold more smartphones than Apple during the quarter but the Korean firm lost its share in the high-end market to Apple after the maker of the iPhone began offering models with bigger screens last fall.

    Apple on Tuesday reported that it sold 61 million iPhones in the quarter, which drove another quarter of blow-out profits.

    Samsung, which does not disclose its smartphone shipments, is estimated to have sold 81 million smartphones during the quarter according to analysts. But most of the sales increase came from mid-level handsets like the Galaxy A series, which are sold at a cheaper price than its flagship models.

    The Korean company said its profits will increase during the second quarter as the Galaxy S6 and S6 Edge with curved screens expand sales after their global launch this month. But the shipments of those high-end phones will not be big enough to offset decreased sales of middle- to low-end models. Marketing expenses will also go up, pressuring its profit margin.

    The only business that saw an improvement in profit during the first three months of this year was Samsung’s component division that supplies chips and displays for makers of smartphones and televisions, including Apple Inc. Samsung’s consumer electronics division that makes television sets turned unprofitable, losing 140 billion won during the quarter.

    Looking ahead, Samsung said its overall earnings will increase during the second quarter from the previous three months, as sales of premium smartphones such as its Galaxy series as well as the iPhone drive demand for its semiconductor products and display panels.

  • Nasa’s Messenger spacecraft makes crashing finale into Mercury

    Nasa’s Messenger spacecraft makes crashing finale into Mercury

    CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida (TIP): Nasa’s pioneering Messenger spacecraft ended its four-year study of the planet Mercury on Thursday by crashing into the planet’s surface, scientists said.

    Flight controllers at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory in Maryland earlier estimated that Messenger, traveling at more than 8,700mph (14,000kph), would hit the ground near Mercury’s north pole at 3.26pm EDT (1926 GMT).

    Messenger, with no more fuel to maneuver, fought the downward push of the sun’s gravity until it impacted the planet’s surface. It likely gouged a 52-foot-wide (16 meter) crater into Mercury’s scarred face.

    During its final weeks in orbit, Messenger relayed more details about the innermost planet of the solar system, which turns out to have patches of ice inside some of its craters, despite its sizzling location more than twice as close to the sun as Earth.

    “We’ve been concentrating on getting as much of the data down on the ground,” lead researcher Sean Solomon, with Columbia University in New York, wrote in an email. “We will have years to think about the meaning of the measurements.”

    Messenger (Mercury Surface, Space ENvironment, GEochemistry, and Ranging craft) made the first close-up studies of Mercury since Nasa’s Mariner 10 spacecraft flew by the planet three times in the mid-1970s. It arrived at Mercury in 2011 after a circuitous six-year journey.

    During its 4,104 orbits of Mercury, Messenger made surprising detections of potassium, sulfur and other volatiles on the planet’s surface that presumably should have evaporated due to the planet’s high temperature. Mercury’s average surface temperature is 332 degrees Fahrenheit (167 degrees Celsius), with daytime highs of 801 degrees Fahrenheit (427 degrees Celsius.)

    Messenger also confirmed the existence of ices and other materials, possibly even carbon-based organics, on the floors of craters where sunlight never shines. During its final days, Messenger attempted to peer directly down into targeted craters, Solomon said.It also found evidence of past volcanic activity and signs the dense and shrinking planet has a liquid-iron core.

  • Why smartphone batteries sometimes explode

    Why smartphone batteries sometimes explode

    LONDON (TIP): Scientists have been able to track the entire process of what happens inside lithium-ion batteries that leads to their overheating and exploding.

    “Understanding how Li-ion batteries fail and potentially cause a dangerous chain reaction of events is important for improving their design to making them safer to use and transport,” said the scientists.

    “We combined high energy synchrotron X-rays and thermal imaging to map changes to the internal structure and external temperature of two types of Li-ion batteries as we exposed them to extreme levels of heat,” said first author Donal Finegan from University College London (UCL).

    The team looked at the effects of gas pockets forming, venting and increasing temperatures on the layers inside two distinct commercial Li-ion batteries as they exposed the battery shells to temperatures in excess of 250 degrees Celsius.

    The battery with an internal support remained largely intact up until the initiation of thermal runaway, at which point the copper material inside the cell melted indicating temperatures up to 1,000 degrees Celsius.This heat spread from the inside to the outside of the battery causing thermal runaway.

    In contrast, the battery without an internal support exploded causing the entire cap of the battery to detach and its contents to eject. Prior to thermal runaway, the tightly packed core collapsed, increasing the risk of severe internal short circuits and damage to neighbouring objects.

    “Hopefully from using our method, the design of safety features of batteries can be evaluated and improved,” said corresponding author Paul Shearing, also from UCL.

  • First 3D-printed implant saves lives of three babies in US

    WASHINGTON (TIP): Scientists have for the first time successfully implanted a groundbreaking 3D-printed device to save the lives of three babies in the US suffering from a life-threatening condition that prevents normal breathing.

    All the three babies had the same life-threatening condition: a terminal form of tracheobronchomalacia, which causes the windpipe to periodically collapse and prevents normal breathing. There was no cure and life-expectancies were grim, researchers said.

    The three boys became the first in the world to benefit from groundbreaking 3D printed devices that helped keep their airways open, restored their breathing and saved their lives at the University of Michigan’s CS Mott Children’s Hospital.

    “These cases broke new ground for us because we were able to use 3D printing to design a device that restored patients’ breathing through a procedure that had never been done before,” said author Glenn Green, from the CS Mott Children’s Hospital. “Before this procedure, babies with severe tracheobronchomalacia had little chance of surviving. Today, our first patient Kaiba is an active, healthy 3-year-old in preschool with a bright future. The device worked better than we could have ever imagined,” said Green.

    The findings also show that the patients were able to come off of ventilators and no longer needed paralytics, narcotics and sedation.

  • Mystery solved: Why knuckles crack

    WASHINGTON (TIP): We’ve all heard it — that loud “Crack!” when someone pulls on stiff knuckles. But what happens to make that sound? It’s something that scientists have puzzled over for decades. A new study has now used a high-speed camera to watch what happens to the joint. That popping sound comes from the formation of a bubble in the fluid between two bones in the finger, it finds.

    And these new data may just settle an age-old debate.

    In 1947, two researchers used a series of X-rays to probe why knuckles “Crack!” Their images indicated that the sound occurs when the bones at a joint rapidly separate, forming an air bubble. It’s a process known as cavitation. Twenty-four years later, a second study looked into the issue. Using similar methods, it concluded the pop was due to some bubble in the joint bursting.

    Two conflicting explanations. Both involved bubbles.

    Although most people came to believe the second explanation, some Canadian researchers wanted to know the real truth. So they formed a research team and conducted tests to settle the dispute.

    Gregory Kawchuk is a bioengineer and rehabilitation-medicine specialist at the University of Alberta in Canada. His team turned to magnetic resonance imaging, or MRI. It can study very fast processes. The team chose one of its members, Jerome Fryer, to lay on his stomach and put his hand inside the MRI machine. Why Fryer? He has an unusual ability. “We call him the Wayne Gretzky of knuckle cracking,” explains Kawchuk. “He can do it in all 10 fingers.”

    The team stuck one of Fryer’s fingers into a tube. As the MRI recorded what was happening, that tube slowly pulled on Fryer’s finger until it cracked. What this revealed “supports the original 1947 study,” says Kawchuk.

    As a finger is pulled, tension mounts in the knuckle joint. Fluid rapidly accumulates there. This shows up as a white spot on the MRI picture. Suddenly, a cavity — or bubble —opens. As it does, the knuckle makes a pop. It’s much like the sound that a suction cup makes as someone pulls it off of a glass window, Kawchuk says. The joint’s bubble can last for up to 20 minutes. And until it goes away, the knuckle will not be able to crack again.

    The researchers hope to repeat their study with more volunteers. It would include some people who can’t crack their knuckles and others with joint diseases. By the way, the researchers say that despite “old wives’ tales,” being able to crack your knuckles could be a sign of healthy joints.

  • Avengers: Age of Ultron – Movie Review

    Avengers: Age of Ultron – Movie Review

    [quote_right]

    CAST: Robert Downey Jr, Chris Hemsworth, Chris Evans, Mark Ruffalo, Scarlett Johansson, Jeremy Renner, Paul Bettany, Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Elizabeth Olsen

    DIRECTION: Joss Whedon

    GENRE: Action

    DURATION: 2 hours 21 minutes

    [/quote_right]

    STORY: Following S.H.I.E.L.D’s dissolution in Captain America: The Winter Soldier, as a preemptive measure to counter a possible alien attack that happened in the past (The Avengers 2012), Tony Stark (Robert Downey Jr) creates a global peace initiative, which is an artificial intelligence Ultron (voiced by James Spader) that goes rogue. It decides to kill the Avengers, citing world peace. The superheroes soon discover that Ultron intends to wipe out mankind itself. Can the team save the world from the mess of their own creation?

    [quote_center]REVIEW: [/quote_center]

    Avengers: Age of Ultron is one heck of a superhero orgy as the mighty six – Iron Man (RDJ), Hulk (Mark Ruffalo), Capt America (Chris Evans), Thor (Chris Hemsworth), Black Widow (Scarlett Johansson) and Hawkeye (Jeremy Renner) come face-to-face not only with the invincible Ultron, but various characters like Quicksilver (Aaron Taylor-Johnson), Scarlet Witch (Elizabeth Olsen) and Vision (Paul Bettany). With these numerous characters put together, you can’t wait for the ‘party to begin’ and Whedon rewards your anticipation, right from the beginning and maintains it till the end. Fangasm guaranteed.

    AOU is no less than a spectacle (the opening scene in particular with the heroes in slowmo – midair as they pounce on their enemies) and you get exactly what you pay for. The unparalleled action is of epic proportions and makes the mammoth destruction shown in Man of Steel and the previous Avengers film pale in comparison.

    However, unlike the previous film which was more massy, this densely plotted sequel may appeal to the geeks more. For those not acquainted with the MCU (Marvel Cinematic Universe), getting the threads together of this layered film could be a task. So, brush up on your Marvel jargon before watching this one.

  • Salma Hayek receives Spirit of Humanity award

    Salma Hayek receives Spirit of Humanity award

    Actress Salma Hayek has received the 2015 Khalil Gibran Spirit of Humanity award from the Arab American Institute.

    Hayek was recognised in the Individual Achievement category for her role as producer of the animated film “The Prophet”, inspired by Khalil Gibran’s book.

    “I’m a citizen of the world, and my country is humanity, kids are poets from the moment they’re born; they get Gibran’s message without thinking about the meaning of individual words,” Hayek said during the award ceremony here on Wednesday, reports Efe.

    The institute highlighted the Salma Hayek Foundation’s work to end violence against women and attract global attention to humanitarian crises.

    In Gibran’s “The Prophet” nine directors interpret the work of the poet from Lebanon.

    One of the selected poems tells the kaleidoscopic and symbolic story of an imprisoned poet and a mischievous little girl.

    The movie, brainchild of Roger Allers (“The Lion King”) and Bjarne Hansen, illustrates the poems of Gibran, and includes contributions from artists from around the world.

    “Animating a work already read by 120 million people around the world was a challenge, so I recruited nine leading animation directors and gave them total freedom to imagine a story based on his poems,” she said.

  • Kristen Stewart feels Hollywood is ‘disgustingly sexist’

    Kristen Stewart feels Hollywood is ‘disgustingly sexist’

    Kristen Stewart has criticized how Hollywood works saying that women inevitably have to work a little bit harder to be heard as Hollywood is “disgustingly sexist”.

    The ‘Twilight’ star, who has graced Harper Bazaar’s cover this month, said in the interview that Hollywood is so offensive and it is crazy, E!Online reported.

  • movie review – Gabbar Is Back

    movie review – Gabbar Is Back

    [quote_right]

    CAST: Akshay Kumar, Shruti Haasan, Suman Talwar, Sunil Grover, Kareena Kapoor Khan

    DIRECTION: Krish

    GENRE: Drama

    DURATION: 2 hours 10 minutes

    [/quote_right]

    STORY: ‘Gabbar’ targets corrupt officials – will this bad guy get good results?

    [quote_center]REVIEW: [/quote_center]

    Gabbar is back – and so is Akshay Kumar, with a big-screen bang. Professor Aditya (Akshay) has a secret life as vigilante Gabbar who terrorizes government officials. Gabbar and his gang kidnap tehsildars, collectors and cops, hanging the most corrupt in public. As the police search frantically for this rebel with a cause, Gabbar decides corrupt builder Patil (Suman) ko bhi sazaa milegi, barabar milegi – does Gabbar succeed?

    Legend says Amjad Khan as Sholay’s dreaded iconic villain Gabbar Singh was so explosive, cassettes featuring just Gabbar’s dialogues sold for years. Gabbar Is Back picks up that high-voltage pulse, remixing it cleverly with the biggest concern of contemporary times – corruption. This Gabbar also terrorizes – but only targets the corrupt. For aam citizens, Gabbar’s an inspiring figure – one who makes you cheer for the ‘bad’ guy.

    Akshay Kumar has a blast playing Gabbar who, with dark, wavy hair and bristly beard, has never looked hotter. With twinkling eyes and deadpan face, Akshay delivers dynamite dialogues – ‘Naam se villain, kaam se hero’, flawless bone-breaking action, redefining PWD (‘power-wala danda’), switching from loose-limbed vulnerability to jaw-clenched intensity in a flash.

    The story powers him with its novel concept (a moral universe where Gabbar is hero and Thakur, a smug cop, snapping at bright constable Sadhuram, played by straight-faced Sunil Grover) and contrasts. Doctors pretending to treat a dead man, nervous officials returning bribes via money orders, tickle you with dark comedy. But you wince as Aditya hears mocking ‘apologies’ by babus, bribed to pass a faulty building that collapses – with many lives.

    With gritty reality, Gabbar has glamour too – Shruti charms with her soft, pretty appeal while a cameo by Kareena adds sheen but doesn’t divert. The second half’s blood pressure doesn’t fully match the first (Patil’s insistent ‘I am a brand!’ gets repetitive while CBI officer Pahwa looks clueless without Sadhuram’s ‘axellent’ work) -but the climax pushes up the adrenaline again.

    While the music’s pleasantly seamless, the editing is razor-sharp, evoking Manmohan Desai, rushing you from one entertaining scene to the next, without time to figure things out – but just enough to feel.

    Now, Gabbar Is Back – and you’ll feel his return rocks.

  • Actress Katrina Kaif joins Twitter for Cannes debut

    Actress Katrina Kaif joins Twitter for Cannes debut

    Bollywood star Katrina Kaif has joined micro-blogging site Twitter to promote her upcoming maiden appearance at the Cannes International Film Festival. Katrina Kaif’s fans have a reason to rejoice as they can now get a peek into her life from her Twitter account. Yes, the actress has finally joined Twitter on April 25, 2015. Her Twitter handle reads @KatrinaAtCannes, although it is not a verified one. The credit goes to the upcoming Cannes International Film Festival and the brand which she endorses.

    Her first tweet read, “Exciting day today! On my way to the @LOrealParisIn press conference. Have you heard the big news?” Sonam Kapoor is among the first few followers of Katrina Kaif on Twitter. Going by the handle, it seems Katrina will be promoting the brand and posting all her activities during the film festival. But whether she will be hooked to this account beyond that or she will quit immediately after the event, we will have to wait and watch.

  • ZARINE KHAN: Comfortable doing bold or intimate scenes

    ZARINE KHAN: Comfortable doing bold or intimate scenes

    Actress Zarine Khan, who will soon be seen in the third film of the erotic thriller franchise Hate Story, says she has no inhibitions about either intimacy or exposing on screen.

    “You guys just tell me a film that does not have any intimate scene and is not glamorous? I don’t know why this film is being tagged as ‘having a lot of exposure’,” the actress said here on being asked if she is ready to expose in the new film of the franchise.

    “Honestly speaking, if I see any of the films being made today, there is an exposure quotient. Anyways, this is something that I will be doing for the first time. As of now, we are working on the story and the character,” she added.

    Hate Story 3 will reportedly see actors Sharman Joshi and Daisy Shah along with Zarine, and the film is likely to be at par with the previous two films in bold and erotic content. The Veer actress says enacting such scenes is part of an actor’s life.

    “There is no point of being ready or not for the exposing scenes, because we are actors. It would be cliche if I say so, but if a character demands such stuff, then as actors we are supposed to give our best. I haven’t done this before. This will be the first time for me, so I myself don’t know how it is going to be,” she added.

  • International Yoga Day

    International Yoga Day

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  • Rudraksha: The Teardrops of Lord Shiva

    Rudraksha: The Teardrops of Lord Shiva

    The word Rudraksha has its etymological beginnings in the two Sanskrit words “Rudra” and “Aksha” meaning Lord Shiva and Teardrops respectively. According to “Shiva Purana”, Lord Shiva once went into deep meditation for the well being of all living creatures. When he woke up, he opened his eyes and tear drops fell on the Earth. These tear drops took the form of seeds that later on became the Rudraksha tree. Rudraksha therefore means ‘The Tear of Lord Shiva’. The dry seed-capsules from the Rudraksha tree form the rudraksha beads, which are being used as a rosary and are also worn as a chain.

    Lord Shiva is always portrayed wearing rosaries of Rudraksha beads on his head, arms and hands. With this came the religious and spiritual significance of Rudraksha. It is believed that the seed of Rudraksha contains the secrets of the entire evolution of the cosmos within it. The sages and yogis of the himalayas, who live according to the Eternal Natural Law of Sanatana Dharma, have always been wearing Rudraksha for centuries for a fearless life on their path to spiritual Enlightenment and Liberation.

    Devotees dedicated to Lord Shiva always wear Rudraksha as rosaries which are used in meditation; it helps to maintain good health, to gain self-empowerment and a fearless life. Rudraksha are noted for their divine protection and are worn on the body singly or as chains (Mala). rudraksha seedBotanically, the holy rudraksha tree is known as ‘Elaeocarpus ganitrus Roxb’ and belongs to the family Tiliaceae, a large evergreen broad-leaved tree with a wide crown. Altitude-wise, its habitat starts from sea-coast and goes up to 2,000 meters. Geographically it is found growing naturally and abundantly in tropical and subtropical areas. The trees are perennial in habitat. The trees are almost 15 to 60 meter in height. This tree grows fast and carries these
    seeds/fruits within seven years. These trees are mostly found in abundance in Nepal, in the Himalayan slopes and also in parts of India, Indonesia and Malaysia. Its English name is Utrasum Bead Tree. In Indonesia the Rudraksha Tree is called Ganitri Tree or Jenitri Tree. Around 70% of the Rudraksha trees are found in Indonesia, 25% in Nepal and 5% in India.

    Rudraksha beads are the seeds of the Rudraksha fruit obtained from Rudraksha trees. Rudraksha beads are covered by an outer shell of blue color on fully ripening, so they are also called blueberry beads and the sweet tasting fruitflesh can be used for treatment of various diseases. It is kept in water for a number of days and then Rudraksha is taken out after peeling off the pulp and brushing it clean.

    Rudraksha is a rare gift of nature to mankind in the sense, that most beads come with a natural hole drilled in the centre, as if nature intended man to use the rudraksha bead to form a chain. Such rudraksha beads are considered especially auspicious. Rudraksha is often believed to symbolize the link between earth and heaven, between man and god. Hence Rudraksha is the object of veneration and also a source to reach the higher self.

    Each seed also possesses from 1 to 38 vertical lines running down its surface, like the longitude lines on a globe. These lines are known as mukhi, or faces, and are natural formations of the seed. Seeds with one vertical line are known as Eka-mukhi (one facet), which are very rare; those with two lines are Dvi-mukhi (two facets), and so on. Each bead has different effects on the wearer, depending on the number of mukhi or faces it has. Each of the many types of Rudraksha Beads have a governing Deity and specific powers and properties.

    As per the Vedic scriptures, Rudraksha beads possess mystical and divine properties and can nullify the effects of malefic planets to a great extent. They offer protection to the wearer. No other bead is considered to be as auspicious and powerful as a Rudraksha.

    The unique properties and divine powers of Rudraksha have been described in the authentic Shastras like the Rudraksha Jabala Upanishad, Padma Purana, Shiva Purana, Devi Purana and Bhagavat Purana. The benefits of this miraculous bead have been flowing to the users/ wearers from time immemorial. Rudraksha, is the most powerful and awesome bead ever, offering protection to its wearer. This bead can help you achieve all you want – a healthy mind, body and soul, a wealthy life that many dream of and only some achieve, and a happy soul.

    Rudraksha comes in many sizes and faces also called “mukhi” meaning “the clefts or furrows or faces on the surface”. According to Shastra (Scripture) there are up to 38 mukhi or faces found on Rudraksha, but Rudraksha of 1 to 14 mukhi are the most commonly available ones. And 5 or 6 are the vast majority.

    95% of the Rudraksha found are with 5 mukhi. It is very rough, hard and tough and can be boiled in hot water for hours without problem. This procedure is sometimes used for testing rare and expensive Rudraksha from the Market for it’s genuineness. To verify the authenticity of the numbers of mukhi, an x-ray photo can be taken as well.

  • Indian American social activist Safeena Husain wins$1.25 million Skoll Award

    Indian American social activist Safeena Husain wins$1.25 million Skoll Award

    WASHINGTON, DC (TIP): Indian American social activist Safeena Husain, 43, was named one of four recipients of the 2015 Skoll Award for Entrepreneurship and accompanying $1.25 million prize.

    Husain won the award after founding the organization Educate Girls, which partners with public schools, trains local champions for girl’s education, and mobilizes communities to create their own action plans to make education more accessible and accountable to girls, according to the Skoll Foundation’s website.

    Since its inception in 2007, Educate Girls has grown from a 50-school pilot project into a large-scale effort reaching 1 million children in 7,500 schools, in India. Over that time the organization has placed 80,000 girls into schools, NPR disclosed.

    Part of Husain’s success with her nonprofit has been convincing young members of India’s largely patriarchal society to realize the status quo must be altered.

    Husain told NPR she remembers a man in his 20s, in India, who said school would encourage girls to “wear short skirts, answer back, and have love marriages.”

    She consequently asked the village headmaster, “Did your daughter have a love marriage,” to which he replied, “We arranged the marriage.”

    “Do you teach them short skirts in school?” Husain asked.

    Of course not, he said. The girls learn to read and write.

    Attitudes toward marriage and garb are shaped at home, not in school, Husain told the naysayer.

    Husain’s efforts are steadily affecting progressive change – she informed the Thomson Reuters Foundation that at present, 60 percent of Educate Girls’ 4,500 India-based volunteers are boys.

    “Having these boys as champions for the girls is absolutely at the core of what we’re trying to achieve,” Husain commented during the Skoll Award gala.

    Husain was raised in Delhi, where she was abused by her stepfather. “I just survived moment by moment,” she told NPR.

    She eventually moved in with her actual father, but the experience of living in the shadow of such a cruel man still haunted her. To escape her demons, instead of going to college,

    Husain retreated to an ashram, living on the banks of the Ganges and reading scriptures.

    The ashram “helped put me together,” she recalled. Afterward, she went on to study in England, and the economics degree she garnered at the London School of Economics got her a job 1995 working for a startup that hoped to develop a 3D internet browser. But after nine months in the heart of Silicon Valley, Hussain knew she “wanted to do something more fulfilling.”

    From 1997 to 2004, she was the Executive Director for Child Family Health International in San Francisco. She was also Board Chair of the International Development Exchange in San Francisco, a non-profit organization that promotes sustainable solutions to counter poverty in Africa, Asia and Latin America.

    She subsequently looked for social service organizations with the word “international” in their name since international development work was what she wanted to do, and got offered a job with Child Family Health International.

    Once she started traveling for her new vocation and returned to her homeland on a work-related trip in 2000 and saw the marginalization of young girls firsthand once again, she knew she had to do something about it, and in 2007, she returned to India and started Educate Girls, for which she currently serves as chief executive.

    “Not one girl has said to me I don’t want education, I want to sit at home and look after the cattle,” Husain told Reuters. “Every single girl I meet wants to go to school – and that for me is my biggest, biggest source of hope.”