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Tuesday, 19 March 2013

Honda recalls 300,000 cars worldwide for faulty airbags

domain-b: In the biggest recall in the company's history, Japanese automaker Honda Motor Co's recall of vehicles for or faulty driver's airbag inflators yesterday rose to nearly 950,000. Tokyo-based Honda, Japan's second-largest automaker is recalling more than 300,000 cars worldwide of 10 models manufactured in 2001 and 2002, including models of the popular Accord and Civic. Of the latest recall, 280,000 were sold in the US, 27,000 in Canada, 2,000 in Japan, 359 vehicles in Europe with 200 in Germany alone, and 158 in Israel and one in the UK.  The expanded recall is for the following makes and model years: 2001 and 2002 Accord, 2001 to 2003 Civic, 2001 to 3003 Odyssey, 2002 and 2003 CR-V, 2003 Pilot, 2002 and 2003 Acura 3.2 TL and 2003 Acura 3.2 C. ''Affected driver's airbag inflators may deploy with too much pressure, which can cause the inflator casing to rupture and could result in injury or fatality," the carmaker said in a statement. The latest recall is an expansion of recalls for the same problem in 2008, 2009 and early this year. In November, 2008, Honda recalled 4,000 Accord and Civic 2001 model, and then extended the recall in July 2009 to 440,000 and 378,758 vehicles in February this year.Read Full: domain-b.com : Honda recalls 300,000 cars worldwide for faulty airbags

Euro Zone in the Twilight Zone


The New Year began with pundits telling the same old story: the global economy is in crisis. Growth forecasts are being revised downwards for both developed and developing nations. The chieftains of world capital are now choosing to warn the rest of the world of an impending global economic catastrophe if solutions are not found quickly.Europe and America's financial and economic woes are long and deep - and of their own making. The resulting spasms reflect the accelerating decline of the traditional global financial network, as the galloping changes in global power centers of world finance find themselves unable to keep up with the economic realities. The Euro area is deep in the economic danger zone. Its public debt rose to 88.4 percent of GDP in 2011. Its economy is forecasted to contract 0.5 percent in 2012 before returning to meager growth of 0.8 percent in 2013. Indeed, the very future of the Euro - its crown jewel - is threatened as member-states face financial meltdowns created by fiscal and monetary overheating. Powerful lenders Germany and France are forced to rethink as the defaults expand. Italy, Spain, Ireland, Portugal and Greece have all moved from boom to bust, as the EU faces its worst recession in living memory. Greece badly needs to pay 14.5 million Euros in debt redemption and get private creditors to write off over another 100 million Euros - all by March 20, 2012 - to be able to get a 130 billion Euro bailout needed to avoid going bust and setting off another global financial meltdown. Source: China.org.cn

UK: Salmonella identified in watermelons

Fresh Plaza: A salmonella outbreak linked to watermelons has affected 35 people in the UK, health experts have revealed. One person has died, although they had serious underlying health issues. The Health Protection Agency (HPA) said three times the usual number of cases of Salmonella Newport infection for this time of year had been seen. Cases of illness caused by the same strain have been seen in Ireland and Germany. Over 200 cases of Salmonella Newport are reported in the UK each year. Around 70% of cases were in women, and the East of England has had more cases than other regions. Experts say
   Image Link Photobucket
there are two possible ways watermelons could have caused infection. One is that the surface of the melons could have been contaminated with Salmonella bacteria which may have transferred on to the flesh of the melon during the cutting process. The second is if the melons were stored or washed in contaminated water, the salmonella bacteria could have got into the flesh of the melon through the cut stem. "Although it's too soon to say with certainty what the likely cause of infection is, early indications suggest that a number of people became unwell after eating watermelon," said Dr Bob Adak, head of the gastrointestinal diseases department at the HPA, which has been monitoring the outbreak in England, Wales and Northern Ireland. Read Full: UK: Salmonella identified in watermelons

Monday, 18 June 2012

Germany advances after 2-1 win over Denmark

Lukas Podolski
Germany advanced to a quarterfinal against Greece after beating Denmark 2-1 on Sunday in their last Group B match at the European Championship. The Danes were eliminated. Lukas Podolski opened the scoring for Germany in the 19th minute and Lars Bender slotted home the winner in the 80th after Michael Krohn-Dehli had equalized for Denmark in the first half. Germany controlled possession, had the best chances and were never really challenged by the Danes, who go home after stunning the Netherlands in the first match but losing to Portugal in the second. Germany seized the initiative from the kickoff and came close twice before Podolski, playing his 100th international match, scored his first goal of the tournament. Mario Gomez set him up with a deft backheel touch following Thomas Mueller's low cross from the right flank. Denmark replied just five minutes later with Krohn-Dehli heading in the equalizer from a set piece that stunned the German defense. A corner found Nicklas Bendtner who headed the ball into the area where Krohn-Dehli nodded home his second goal at Euro 2012. Jakob Poulsen missed a chance to put Denmark in the driver's seat at the start of the second half when his shot grazed the outside of German goalkeeper Manuel Neuer's right post. After that scare, the Germans were firmly in charge and denied Denmark any real chance of getting back into the game. Coach Morten Olsen's men were already looking tired when Bender, replacing suspended right back Jerome Boateng, picked up a pass from Mesut Oezil and made it 2-1. Germany finished top of the group with a perfect record of three wins and now faces Euro 2004 champion Greece on Friday in Gdansk. Source: Indian Express

Saturday, 14 April 2012

700 sexual abuse claims against Catholic priests in 2011: report

Catholic
Washington,   About  700  people   launched  new  claims  of   sexual  abuse against Catholic clergy in the United States last year, including 21 who are still minors, according to a new report released by US bishops. The United States Conference of Catholic Bishops said in the report released Tuesday that of the 683 adults who reported allegations for the first time, "most allegations reported today are of incidents from previous decades." Sixty-eight per cent of the complaints relate to events that took place between 1960 and 1984 -- the majority from 1975 to 1979, the report says. Many of the clergy members accused have since died, or been relieved of their church duties. More than 280 of them had been accused in the past, it said. Of the 21 accusations made by minors, seven were considered credible by the police and three were determined to be false, the report said. Three other cases were still under investigation. The Church spent USD 144 million dealing with the scandal in the United States in 2011-- including attorneys' fees, settlements, and support for offenders -- a decrease from USD 150 million in 2010. The Roman Catholic Church has been rocked for several years now by a series of scandals involving allegations in pedophilia, including in Austria, Belgium, Ireland, Germany and the United States. The report is based on an audit of the Catholic dioceses in the United States by the StoneBridge Business Partners. The audit has been undertaken every year since the church was rocked by pedophilia claims in 2002, when the then archbishop of Boston admitted to sheltering a priest accused in multiple abuse cases. "The church must continue to be vigilant," said Cardinal Timothy Dolan of New York, the president of the bishops' conference. "The church must do all she can never to let abuse happen again. And we must all continue to work with full resolve toward the healing and reconciliation of the victims/survivors." The publication of the report comes several weeks after the start of the first trial of an American bishop who sheltered pedophile priests. Monsignor William Lynn, who was responsible for supervising more than 800 priests in Philadelphia, stands accused of failing to report allegations of sexual abuse and failing to keep two priests away from minors. Lynn faces up to 14 years in prison. Source: Indian Express

Monday, 9 April 2012

Seeing the music in nature

Domain_B:  If  anyone  were  going  to  discover   the  connections   between 
Markus Buehler 
molecular structures, mathematical concepts and musical scores, it's not surprising that Markus Buehler would be the one. He has built his career on bridging the connections between disparate disciplines, asking simple questions as an approach to understanding the world. Buehler grew up around engineering; his father is a mechanical engineer, his mother worked in the automotive industry and his two brothers became engineers as well (one mechanical, one computer). During his youth, Buehler was drawn to understanding how things worked, and started designing and building electronic circuits when he was about 11. Soon after, he began writing programs to regulate common things around his house, such as the household's solar-panel system for heating water and his electric train setup, automating the switching of tracks. Later, he wrote programs that simulated the dynamics of stock trading. In addition to building things, Buehler says, ''I enjoyed breaking things apart to learn how they were made, and using what I had learned to build it again with a new approach or with improvements. I built a radio and an intercom system for our house by taking apart telephones. It took a couple of iterations, but I finally got it to work well.'' On the side, Buehler taught himself how to play several instruments and began composing his own pieces. Though he no longer finds time to compose music, he enjoys sharing his musical interests with his children, including teaching them to play the guitar. His passion for music has also come into play recently in his research, which found significant correlations between the structure of spider webs and principles  of    musical   composition.   During   high   school,   Buehler  was
Spiderfascinated by chemistry and intrigued by how materials derive their properties from the structure of their molecules. After earning his PhD at the Max Planck Institute in Stuttgart, Germany, he went to the California Institute of Technology as a postdoc. That's where he began working on computer simulations of chemically complex materials, and began to incorporate such models in the description of biological materials - a specialty that has remained a cornerstone of his research ever since. ''I changed fields completely, but only in terms of the application of my work,'' he says. Having done his doctoral research in materials science working on metals, he decided to focus on understanding features of natural phenomena, studying biological materials such as bone, spider webs or the proteins that make up the structures in our body's cells. ''I saw an opportunity to combine a chemistry-based approach with molecular simulations and multiscale modeling,'' Buehler says. Such approaches can be used not only to understand the function of biological materials in their physiological context, but also to appreciate the breakdown of diseased tissues. Given his focus on biological materials, people often ask Buehler how he ended up on the faculty of MIT's department of civil and environmental engineering - a field more traditionally associated with concrete and steel on the one hand, and oceans and ecosystems on the other. ''My work falls in between these fields, at the interface between the natural and the engineering-built world'' he says. ''I saw an opportunity to work on projects that could be in useful for both sides. It's a unique combination to work at this interface, and a good fit for what I was interested in.'' He was awarded tenure last fall. Since joiningIllustration of protein structures
   Image Link Flicker
the MIT faculty in 2006, Buehler has focused on understanding biological materials such as spider silk and the tangled masses of protein known as amyloids - primarily as a way to understand how their complex structures functional properties of manmade materials. He has also collaborated with his wife, whose experimental research at Harvard University focused on the interactions of cells with materials. ''She has taught me a lot about biology, and how simulations might contribute to the field,'' he says. But ''our focus is not to just copy nature'' or the kinds of materials nature produces, Buehler says. Rather, he'd like to learn the underlying principles of how complex, hierarchical structures with useful properties can be assembled from the simplest of building blocks - and how engineers can actually apply such knowledge in different materials or in different problems altogether. ''Here, I feel like I have an opportunity to do something new,'' Buehler says. ''At MIT, we don't believe in keeping things the same, we continue to push the boundaries of innovation.'' Civil and environmental engineering research ''is no longer just about building bridges, it's about using nanotechnology and scalability to improve the materials we use to build and maintain our infrastructure, and to improve the interface between the natural and built world from the tiny atoms to the tallest of structures. It's exciting to be part of redefining this field.'' Source: Domain_B

Tuesday, 6 March 2012

Germany resumes Indian grape imports

Fresh Plaza: Germany has recommenced with ordering table grapes from India after blocking their import for the last two years. The move comes after meetings between an Indian delegation with the German authorities in Berlin. In the 2010 grapes season European countries rejected shipments of Indian grapes after chemical residues were discovered. After the government and exported took steps to improve the quality of the fruits most EU countries began to accept the fruit again. Not Germany however, which continued to resist the grapes on the grounds of food safety. Source: Fresh Plaza

Wednesday, 29 February 2012

Loss-making Air Berlin to "shrink"


Germany’s second-largest airline behind Lufthansa may rack up a record net loss this year, could be double that of last year according to unidentified company manager GERMAN loss-making airline Air Berlin aims to trim costs by up to €250m a year, a German magazine reported, above its official savings target of €200m for next year. "We have to build out our current  restructuring programme," Air  Berlin CE Hartmut Mehdorn was quoted as telling employees by business  weekly Wirtschaftswoche on Saturday. In a story released in advance of publication today, the magazine also quoted company sources as saying Germany’s second-largest airline behind Lufthansa would rack up a record net loss of €200m this year, double that of last year. The magazine quoted an unidentified Air Berlin manager as saying the airline was pushing for bigger savings. "We are now targeting €220m. "In the meantime, we have even started to assume internally an improvement of €250m," the manager said. An Air Berlin spokeswoman on Saturday said there was no reason to change the company’s announced savings target. "The goal is to reach a volume of €200m in 2012," the spokeswoman said. "We will not comment on speculation about the company’s earnings in 2011."Source: Business Day, ***

Saturday, 18 February 2012

BMW Classic Opens Online Parts Shop for Cars and Motorcycles Built from 1960 to 1990

Carscoop: If you happen to be a European owner of aclassic BMW and either prefer to shop original parts directly from the automaker or you need a specific component that can't be found anywhere else, the German company has some good news in store for you. BMW announced today that it has launched a new online shop dedicated to its classic models offering customers the opportunity to buy parts straight from their computer. Currently, the BMW Classic Parts website is available only for
customers in Germany but the service will be expanded to further European markets in April. The Bavarian automaker tells us that the range of parts in the new online shop currently totals some 35,000 items and covers cars and motorcycles manufactured from 1960 to 1990. The company notes, however, that certain parts that are heavy, along with dangerous goods and materials, and electronic components are not including in the range. You can take a look at the German version of the website at www.bmw-classic.de and European at www.bmw-classic.com.BMW Classic Opens Online Parts Shop for Source: Carscoop

Wednesday, 25 January 2012

10 Classic beauties from around the world

By: María S.Muñoz ,A look at some of the most beautiful and magnetic classic actresses from around the world. 1. Marilyn Monroe (Los Angeles, US, 1926-1962), She had a difficult childhood, spent in several orphanages. After acting in smaller films, in 1950 she participated in The Asphalt Jungle and All About Eve, with which her career began to consolidate. From that moment on, she became one of the biggest erotic myths of all time.
   Marilyn Monroe
2. Audrey Hepburn (Brussels, Belgium, 1929-1993) She became a living myth thanks to her angelical face, freshness and exquisite elegance. Audrey was also known for being a dancer, model and one of the greatest actresses in history. After retiring, she devoted much of her time to humanitarian work.
   Audrey Hepburn
3. Vivian Leigh (Darjeeling, India, 1913- 1967), Born to English parents, she was educated throughout Europe. Considered on the most beautiful actresses of the Golden Age of American Cinema, Vivian won the Academy Awards for Best Actress in two occasions. She is mainly remembered for her role as Scarlett O’Hara in the film Gone With the Wind.
   Vivian Leigh
4. Sophia Loren (Rome, Italy, 1932), She is the perfect prototype of Mediterranean beauty as well as a great actress. She won several beauty contests, which helped her to work in the world of cinema. She was the first person who won an Academy Award with a performance in a language other than English.
   Sophia Loren
5. Rita Hayworth (New York, US, 1918-1987) Born Margarita Carmen Cansino, she was the daughter of a Spanish dancer and an Irish-born artist. Rita was trained as a dancer and she only reached her fame as an erotic myth with her role as Gilda (1946).
   Rita Hayworth
6. Veruschka (Königsberg, Rusia, 1939), Her background is sad and tough; she spent her childhood in labor camps until the end of World War II. Her five minutes performance as a model in the film Blow up (1966) ensured her contracts with the best photographers of the moment.
   Veruschka
7. Ava Gardner (North Carolina, US, 1922- 1990), She began to act in 1942 and for a long time she was typecast as a sex symbol described as “the world’s most beautiful animal”. Her performance skills were highlighted in films like Mogambo or The Snows of Kilimanjaro.
   Ava Gardner
8. Leela Naidu (Mumbai, India, 1940-2009), Born to an Irish mother and an Indian mother this Indian actress was crowned Miss India in 1954 and voted by Vogue as one of the 10 most beautiful women in the world. Her style was sophisticated and elegant. Her first film was Anuradha in 1960.
   Leela Naidu
9. Mervat Ameen (El-Menya, Egypt, 1948), One of the most famous Egyptian actresses of all time, Mervat shot to fame when she acted with Abdel Halim Hafez in the film My Father is Up the Tree (1969). Her beauty is natural and elegant
   Meryat Ameen
10. Marlene Dietrich (Berlin, Germany 1901-1992), She was a German actress and singer with a great variety of ranges. Her fascinating and enigmatic personality delighted both the cameras and the public.
   Marlene Dietrich
Source: Bikya Masr, open images in new browser to find its source of sharing.

Tuesday, 3 January 2012

Infertile men may soon be able to father kids with lab grown sperm

News Track India: London, Jan 3 (ANI): Infertile men may soon be able to father their own children rather than using donor sperm, thanks to researchers in Germany and Israel who have grown mouse sperm from a few cells in a laboratory dish. For the first time, a team headed by Professor Stefan Schlatt, at Muenster University in Germany, were able to grow sperm by using compound germ cells. These are the cells in testicles that are  responsible for sperm production. They grew the sperm by surrounding  the germ cells in a
special called agar jelly to create an environment similar to that found in testicles, the Telegraph reported.  "I believe it will eventually be possible to routinely grow human male sperm to order by extracting tissue containing germ cells from a man's testicle and stimulating sperm production in the laboratory," said Prof. Mahmoud Huleihel, who also grew the sperm at Israel's Ben Gurion University in Beersheba.  Now the scientists who made the discovery have begun experiments that will hopefully lead to the 'Holy Grail' - human sperm grown outside a man's body.  Professor Huleihel said his team were now working 'as quickly as possible' to reproduce their success in mice to help infertile men. "We have already applied the same tests as we did with mice in the laboratory, using human cells, but as yet have not had success. We are confident that if it can be done in a mammal such as a mouse it can be done in humans," he stated. "We are experimenting with a number of different compounds to get the germ cells to grow into sperm. And we believe it will be possible. And, hopefully, soon," he added.  The findings of the sperm trial have been revealed in a major scientific journal published by Nature. (ANI) Source: News Track India

Friday, 23 December 2011

EU: Taste wheel developed for fruit


Fresh Plaza: Fruit has a huge variety of tastes. To map them out experts of the research institute Agroscope Changins-Wädenswil (ACW), Germany have developed the first taste wheel for fruit. It works in much the same way as the taste wheel for wine and can help consumers choose a product. But it should also help professionals. Division of  the taste wheel :  The taste  wheel  for fruit  has  a 
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division of three levels. Firstly distinction is made between the different aromatic groups, such as fruity and spicy. The key concepts are then divided even more, as the fruity aroma family consists of five lower families - citrus, tropical, fruit, dry fruits and berries. On the third level its about the actual aroma - for citrus it's lemon, orange, mandarin, lime and citrus peal. The illustrations in the middle of the taste wheel are for quick orientation. Source: Taste wheel developed for fruit

Wednesday, 14 December 2011

s.Oliver: Striving ahead with super hero denims

Global apparel brand s.Oliver that entered India in 2007 has a well-chalked out plan to gradually spread retail footprint to the metros. As Kunal Pant, Head, Design and Buying, s.Oliver Fashions India explains, “The brand’s journey in India began with the opening up of a store in Delhi and another small store in Mumbai. We expanded into these markets by opening two more stores. While we were building our brand presence in
three Mumbai and Delhi we were testing waters in Pune and Bangalore. By December 2011, we will have stores in Pune and by January 2012, we’ll add a store in Bangalore.” In all, the brand is present through eight EBOs and about 14 shop-in-shops in India. s.Oliver creates 12 collections a year, with the bulk of its business coming from northern market. So the focus is on heavy winter wear and heavy outer wear in the north, while in the west light layering works best for the brand. Elaborates Pant, “But the key trends are more or less the same. Right now you can see a lot of Nordic prints or Nordic motifs and animal influences like fake fur. Quilting is something that’s very important. Elbow patches are a concept that’s very strong this season in the market.” But the striving ahead with their new innovation created especially for India. “We have created a super hero denim range for the Indian market. This range has been designed in Germany but specifically targets the Indian customer. Since we have a huge denim history behind us, we have taken the best of the denim in terms of fit, wash and fabric. The fabric is premium and comes from Turkey’s one of the best mills in the world. So when a human being has the best of everything he’s a super hero and when a denim pair has the best of everything, its super denim,” he explains. Read Full: s.Oliver: Striving ahead with super hero denims - Fashion - news - Fashion News India, jobs, network, apparel, business

Watch this space ?


In a revolutionary approach to medical simulation a centre, that uses a bespoke digital video solution to closely monitor medical teams under stress, has been installed at a Munich university. Anna Mitchell explores the unique facility. Simulation in medicine has a tradition that dates back thousands of years,” explains Christian Hinske, a medical doctor and MIT graduate. “Most simulation is used to practice medical procedures but what we’re doing here is very different." Hinske is talking about the Human Simulation Centre at The Ludwig-Maximilians University (LMU) in Munich, Germany. The centre was designed and built to monitor medical teams’ reactions in stressful situations. Marc Lazarovici, medical doctor and an informatics graduate, leads the centre that is situated within the university’s Institute of Emergency Medicine. He explains the centre’s purpose is two-fold. Firstly emergency medicine teams, mostly from Germany, pay to train at the centre. They particularly focus on the stressful handovers that occur as any emergency is dealt with. This could be the transfer of a patient from the scene of an accident to an ambulance or their admittance to the emergency ward in a hospital. The centre is also used for research.The individuals taking part in the simulations are carefully monitored not only for their own development, but in an effort to pinpoint problematic areas that could have an impact on how medical response is carried out. Training is for experienced medical professionals and both Dr Lazarovici and Dr Hinske stress the importance of training teams that usually work together to avoid people “playing roles”. Teams are usually made up of between three and five people. Three teams usually rotate during any one simulation with two watching. Dr Hinske says: “We’re looking at team interfaces and interaction in emergencies. In an emergency you have a tight timescale. Classical simulation focuses on static situations. You’ll have a patient in an operating theatre and you’ll monitor their life signs as you perform a procedure. Source: Inavate

Monday, 5 December 2011

Future of solar is fewer big manufacturers

By: NATALIE OBIKO PEARSON, Three US solar firms including Solyndra have gone bankrupt this year and more have slashed sales forecasts, with German company agreeing to takeover. MOST of the biggest manufacturers of solar equipment may disappear in the next few years as plunging prices erode margins and drive the weakest out of business, according to Trina Solar, the fifth-largest supplier of solar panels.This is the decade of mergers and acquisitions," Jifan Gao, CEO of China-based Trina, said this week. "From now until 2015 is the first phase, when about two-thirds of the players will be shaken out."Three US solar companies including Solyndra have gone bankrupt this year and more, led by First Solar and Yingli Green Energy Holding, slashed sales and margin forecasts, reflecting slower growth in demand and stiffer competition. SunPower and Roth & Rau of Germany have agreed to takeovers.BusinessDay - Future of solar is fewer big manufacturers

Monday, 3 October 2011

Dialysis on the go for kidney patients waiting transplants

Dialysis

Scientists have come up with a bag for 'dialysis on the go', a breakthrough which they claim may transform the lives of patients awaiting kidney transplants. An international team, led by Singapore-based firm AWAK Technologies, which has developed the device, says the shoulder bag contains a mini version of the bulky equipment normally used to carry out the job of diseased kidneys. The new kit could mean patients can go shopping, take a walk or even go abroad instead of spending hours hooked up in a hospital ward, say the scientists. A trial is already under way at the University Children's Hospital in Tubingen, Germany, the 'Sunday Express' reported. Team leader Professor Rupert Handgretinger hailed it as 'a major breakthrough'. “The children can continue a normal life with their families,” he said. In fact, the scientists made the revolutionary advance by squeezing its dialysis kit into a laptop-sized bag. A sterile sugar and mineral solution is pumped through a tube from the bag to the abdomen and, crucially, the kit needs just a litre of fluid which can be recycled for six months. Timothy Statham, chief executive of the National Kidney Federation, said the news was 'exciting' for patients needing dialysis.“This could improve the quality of life for many,” he added. Source: Financial Express

Monday, 12 September 2011

26th EU PVSEC: What will happen next?

By: Becky Stuart, Accelerated consolidation and increased competition among photovoltaic producers are two key themes set to characterize 2012’s solar industry. Meanwhile, the "easy phase" of making money is said to be over.The EU PVSEC has opened for business for the 26th time. Located in Germany’s Hamburg, the overall atmosphere on the first day of this inaugural event is, in certain halls, bustling, despite comments that it is off to a rather slow start. And, while the mist was lingering in the air this morning, it has since lifted to let the sun shine through – hopefully a positive sign for the week ahead. One of the key questions posed at the opening conference was, "What will happen next year?" This, said Ingmar Wilhelm, president of the European Photovoltaic Industry Association (EPIA), is already a concern today. He said that consolidation in the industry is already going on, and is even accelerating. He added that competition among producers is increasing; this is specifically being seen in the rapid price declines, which have occurred in the first half of this year. China, Japan, and "maybe" Korea and Malaysia are expected to contribute "much more than we have seen so far" to the industry. Currently, Europe accounts for around 70 percent of the market share. This is, however, expected to decline in 2012 to around 50 percent. Source: PV-Magazine

Friday, 9 September 2011

Carscoop's A-to-Z Guide to the 2011 Frankfurt Motor Show Debuts

Frankfurt will play host to the world's largest and most important motor show of the year and this here is our preliminary list of the production models and conceptual studies that have eitherbeen confirmed or are rumored to debut in Germany. The 64th IAA International Auto Show, more commonly referred to as the Frankfurt Motor Show, runs for the media from September 13 to 14, and for the public, from September 15 to 25. Read Full: Carscoop's A-to-Z Guide to the 2011 Frankfurt Motor Show Debuts - Carscoop

Wednesday, 31 August 2011

Indians most bullish on video conferencing !


Mumbai : Indians are most bullish on prospects of video conferencing which is becoming a ‘way of doing everyday business’ with more than 70 per cent saying it will become a regular practice at workplaces this year. Currently, video conferencing (57 per cent) is the third most preferred method for communicating with clients, after face-to-face meetings (82 per cent) and email conversations (60 per cent) at Indian workplaces, a research conducted by Cable&Wireless Worldwide revealed recently. The emphasis on face-to-face communications appears stronger in Asia as compared to Europe. As high as 98 per cent respondents in India agreed that seeing a business contact is important while carrying out a significant business deal. Indians also believe that a face-to-face or a video conference with their bank manager, travel agent, or their insurance company, for instance, would be more impactful than an email or a telephone conversation. C&W Worldwide’s survey also revealed that a majority of Indians put in an extra effort into their appearance to make a good impression while taking part in a face-to-face or a video conference meeting with business associates. This figure was the highest amongst Indians (98 per cent) when compared to UK (90 per cent); Spain (94 per cent); Singapore (97 per cent) and Germany (90 per cent). Interestingly, Indian males (64.2 per cent) put in more effort to look good when compared to Indian women (55.6 per cent)!  Apart from the business angle, the survey also found that more than 54 percent of people in India would be happy to deal with their doctor or health provider on a video call, while 31 per cent would want to meet their employer over a VC! Read Full: Indians most bullish on video conferencing !

Sunday, 28 August 2011

A planet made of diamond found?


Astronomers claim that a planet orbiting a small fast spinning star, called a pulsar, is likely made of diamond. Pulsars are small spinning stars about 20 km in diameter – the size of a small city – that emits a beam of radio waves. As the star spins and the radio beam sweeps repeatedly over Earth, radio telescopes detect a regular pattern of radio pulses. Researchers, from The University of Manchester as well as institutions in Australia, Germany, Italy, and the USA, noticed that the arrival times of the pulses were systematically modulated. They concluded that this was due to the gravitational pull of a small companion planet, orbiting the pulsar in a binary system. But despite its small size, the planet has slightly more mass than Jupiter. “This high density of the planet provides a clue to its origin”, said Professor Bailes. The team thinks that the ''diamond planet'' is all that remains of a once-massive star, most of whose matter was siphoned off towards the pulsar. “This remnant is likely to be largely carbon and oxygen, because a star made of lighter elements like hydrogen and helium would be too big to fit the measured orbiting times,” said Dr Michael Keith (CSIRO), one of the research team members. The density means that this material is certain to be crystalline: that is, a large part of the star may be similar to a diamond. The study has been published in the journal Science. Source: Hindustan Times