03. April 2007

Telephone call attempt from world's highest peak ( Mt. Everest ) to be made

An attempt is going to be made wherein a British mountain climber named Rod Bader will be attempting a phone call from the highest peak in the World Mount Evererst which is in Nepal. In a rather silly publicity stunt sponsored by Motorola, Bader will attempt to climb Mount Everest in late May, and, weather permitting, place a phone call from the summit through a tower located in China that has a clear line of sight to the north side of the peak.However, this means that world record holder Bader (he’s climbed more of the world’s highest points than anyone else, apparently) will need to follow a more difficult route to the top, and although he will have a support crew tagging along, the lack of Powersauce bars may prove to be his undoing.

Through Engadget

01. April 2007

Google Paper Service

Today Google mail announced a new service called google paper u must have seen it if u opened gmail today.

FAQ

Is it free?

Yes. The cost of postage is offset with the help of relevant, targeted, unobtrusive advertisements, which will appear on the back of your Gmail Paper prints in red, bold, 36 pt Helvetica. No pop-ups, no flashy animations?these are physically impossible in the paper medium.
How about attachments?

All part of the deal. Photo attachments are printed on high-quality, glossy photo paper, and secured to your Gmail Paper with a paper clip. MP3 and WAV files will not be printed. We recommend maintaining copies of your non-paper Gmail in these cases.
Is there a limit?

You can make us print one, one thousand, or one hundred thousand of your emails. It?s whatever seems reasonable to you.
But what about the environment?

Not a problem. Gmail Paper is made out of 96% post-consumer organic soybean sputum, and thus, actually helps the environment. For every Gmail Paper we produce, the environment gets incrementally healthier.

How it works



Find out more here Keeping in mind the Date
P.S. the link may not work after this date.

27. March 2007

Wired.com lists top 40 Innovative companies of 2007

Numbers after the names represent the corresponding companies rank in the previous year

1 Google | 1
The masters of the universe are busily converting ad dollars into a global network of fiber lines and data centers. A plan etary computer crunching ever- larger mountains of bits is an invention of historic import. Google’s power to inspire both awe and fear continues to grow.

2 Apple | 2
Tired: MP3 players. Wired: mobile handsets! And why not? Especially if the Apple crew can stuff most of a Mac into a futuristic gadget straight out of Minority Report. Cell phone + iPod + social networking = marketer’s dream.

3 Genentech | 4
When you target specific biological mechanisms, your drugs can sidestep the one-disease rut: Avastin has been OK’d for a growing list of cancers. And since 20 new drugs are set to enter the pipeline by 2010, the chances for more multiple hits are good.

4 Samsung | 3
Mobile handsets have joined PCs as the focus of some of high tech’s most brutal slugfests. Samsung’s upmarket strategy protects margins – a tactic it has been using to batter Sony in home theater and camcorders. Too bad about that iPhone.

5 News Corp. | 9
Why fly capital-sucking TV satellites when you’ve got 90 million MySpacers glued to their screens? King Rupert is feeding the greatest frenzy of media populism since the birth of the tabloid press. Now he needs to convert it into broadcast-style revenue.

6 Nintendo new!
Hot graphics? Nah. What’s delighting gamers – and blowing the smirk off Sony’s face – is the Wii’s acrobatic controller. Selling a million consoles a month gives the Pok master a happy challenge: turning a runaway hit into an enduring franchise.

7 Salesforce.com | 15
The pioneering purveyor of Web-based business apps keeps swiping small and midsize clients from giant rivals Oracle and SAP. Latest cool tool: a one-stop online marketing platform that ports your campaign directly to Google AdWords.

8 Cisco | 12
As the petabits surge, Cisco keeps outflanking cut-rate competitors and surfing the flood of online video. VoIP gear and set-top boxes contribute to ’90s-style earnings growth. Now CEO John Chambers hopes to sell the world on wall-size, hi-def telepresence.

9 General Electric | 8
Good-bye to the slow-lane plastics division. Hello to avionics, security systems, and medical labs in a box. Edison’s heirs keep doubling down on products too big, gnarly, or capital-intensive for companies that haven’t been ruling Big Tech for a century.

10 Nvidia | 21
Three trillion operations per second make for a killer demo: hyper-real renderings of glamazon Adrianne Curry. But the new GeForce 8800 chip is alsospeedy enough to launch gaming’s graphics powerhouse into totally new markets, like gene sequencing.

11 Baidu new!
In China, Google is just another imported also-ran. Baidu, which handles more than 60 percent of the country’s searches, is teaming up with recording giant EMI to deliver ad-supported music. On demand: the biggest hits from Hong Kong and Taiwan!

12 Toyota | 7
How about a buff Tundra CrewMax truck – with a dashboard nav screen that also displays the view from a tailgate-mounted camera – to tow your groovy Prius? Toyota doesn’t confine all that cool tech to little green geekmobiles.

13 SunPower | 17
Acquiring installation specialist PowerLight gives SunPower total command of the solar food chain, from R&D to rooftop. The plan is to shear overall system costs in half, enough to let sunshine compete head-on with cheap coal-fired grid power.

14 Infosys | 11
So much for cut-rate coding. The rajas of outsourcing are taking on R&D and computer-aided engineering. But the work is still massively human-intensive, which means battling upstart rivals to hire more than 500 new Infoscions a week.

15 Medtronic | 16
A chest implant that transmits vital signs to the Web for your cardiologist to view – the boomer iPhone! Medtronic’s $25,000 pacemaker-like device is just the start. Look for similar innovations that treat epilepsy, obesity, and depression.

16 Level 3 new!
Wiring the planet with fiber optics really was a great idea – it just took a while for YouTube and friends to come up with the petabits to make it pay. Level 3 boasts 50,000 miles of prime Net backbone. Now it can start working off that $6 billion in debt.

17 Exelon | 33
Emission caps? Carbon taxes? No worries when two-thirds of the 25,000 megawatts you produce are atom-powered. Exelon is aiming to build the first new US reactor in a generation. Now, if Uncle Sam would kindly figure out where to stash spent nuclear fuel.

18 Netflix | 14
CEO Reed Hastings is either a stone-cold visionary or the Hamlet of online media. After three years of indecision, Netflix is finally serving (B-list) movies online to select subscribers. Upgrade price tag: $40 million, most of last year’s DVD-by-mail profit.

19 Verizon | 22
Leading the telco charge against cable, Verizon’s 50-Mbps fiber-to-the-home service is almost twice as fast as its last rollout. Woo-hoo! Now competition has to bring stratospheric prices – upwards of $90 a month – down to earth.

20 Electronic Arts | 13
The King Kong of interactive games needs big hits to justify its Hollywood-size overhead and keep itself in bananas. Speed, sports, and shooter franchises all continue to pull their weight – but just barely. Spore needs to soar.

21 Monsanto | 25
Frankencorn engineered for ethanol production is so 2006. Bring on the trans-fat-free soybeans! After years of fighting cultural headwinds, Monsanto is finally figuring out how to go with the flow. Climate-change special: drought-tolerant corn.

22 Garmin new!
GPS technology has infiltrated cockpits, dashboards, and handhelds. Now industry leader Garmin is making the crucial leap into networked smartphones, laptops, and PTAs – that’s personal travel assistants. Let 10,000 localized services bloom.

23 Amazon.com | 6
Trying to be all stores to all shoppers, Amazon has to compete on a thousand fronts. Now CEO Jeff Bezos is bravely trying to mine value from the back end by offering to handle everything from computing to ecommerce for other businesses.

24 NTT DoCoMo new!
Fat and happy, Japan’s wireless Godzilla keeps ramping up its technology while the rest of the mobile world battles with debt. A hundred megabits a second? Coming right up. Linux for mobile? Domo arigato. Not everything big telcos do is evil.

25 EMC | 26
Disney Studios’ post-Pixar remodel includes two EMC CX3-80 storage networks – just the thing for stashing 1 billion 3-D textures. For the king of data warehousing, though, today’s big opportunity is selling digital closet space for online video.

26 Intercontinental Exchange new!
Once a back-room specialty, energy trading is now center stage. As the leading futures exchange for fossil fuels, electric power, and even emissions, the ICE is hot. Check its 2006 stock chart – up 300 percent – and weep.

27 Comcast | 39
Someday, bitstreams will be metered like water and electricity. Until then, Comcast’s fiesta of digital cable, VOD, DVR, and “triple play” connectivity rules. The challenge: fending off party-crashing telcos, satellite broadcasters, and online insurgents.

28 BP | 31
Oil spills and exploding refineries provide more incentive than ever for the number three oil company to move “beyond petroleum.” The recent $500 million investment in an alt-energy institute is a high profile step in that direction – and less than a week’s profit.

29 Disney new!
It’s the wedding of Hollywood and Silicon Valley, Rev. Steve Jobs presiding. Disney boldly took the iTunes plunge. Now John Lasseter is sprinkling Pixar dust over its studios and theme parks. Can CEO Bob Iger devise a digital makeover for the rest of Mouse house?

30 Yahoo | 5
Five hundred million users can’t be that wrong. Sure, Yahoo got stomped by the most spectacular upstart in business history. But big-brand advertisers, fearing Google uber alles, are pulling for Yahoo’s new Panama ad platform.

31 Boeing new!
Burt Rutan isn’t the only engineering visionary building edgy new planes. Fast, fuel-efficient, and rivet-free, Boeing’s carbon-fiber 787 Dreamliner will be the first truly 21st-century sky ride when it hits the runway next year. Sorry, Airbus.

32 eBay | 19
The perfect Internet business model generates outsize expectations – which means mistakes cost double. Wall Street slammed eBay for bungling in China and pissing off power sellers. Good thing PayPal and Skype are finally starting to earn their keep.

33 Flextronics | 23
The Santa’s workshop of globalization designs, builds, and ships everything from cell phones to printers – and now Lego blocks. Its hyperefficient supply chain fuels a Cambrian explosion of converging devices. And you gotta love what it does for prices.

34 Corningnew!
In high tech, glass used to mean fiber optics. Today, screens are the hot commodity, and Corning supplies LCD substrate to manufacturers like Samsung and Sharp. As prices for flat screens fall and volume soars, the glassmaster profits.

35 Gen-Probe | 35
Gen-Probe’s nucleic-acid tests screen more than 80 percent of the US blood supply, flagging HIV-1, hepatitis C, and West Nile. Assays for prostate cancer are already approved in Europe. Top priority: rapid detection of E. coli and other food-borne pathogens.

36 TSMC | 30
Astrophysicists are over the moon about the new Sing 512-core CPU, destined to simulate the cosmos in a next-gen supercomputer. Who etched its delicate traces? TSMC. The fab-for-hire does the clean-room dirty work so chip wizards can focus on design.

37 Lenovo | 29
Talk about global – the world’s number-three PC maker rotates its headquarters between Beijing, Singapore, Paris, and Raleigh, North Carolina. Lenovo is leveraging low-cost Chinese R&D into cool features like laptops secured by facial recognition.

38 IBM | 18
Its engineering ranks have been decimated by the shift to lucrative IT services, but Big Blue can still punch like a heavyweight. Proof: Linux server code, chips powering all three top game consoles, and social networking software for the suit set.

39 Intel | 24
The empire strikes back. AMD’s ambush of the PC processor market precipitated a hail of new Intel marvels, like a supercomputer on a chip that uses less power than a lightbulb. Now Apple and Sun have Intel inside. Don’t mess with smart, wealthy paranoids.

40 Microsoft | 36
Wanted: second career for rich, fat, nervous ex-monopolist. Desktop software is vanishing into the cloud, and as balance-sheet replacements, Xbox and Zune don’t pass the laugh test. Luckily, $31 billion in rainy-day money buys time and options. (But not Google.)

07. March 2007

Gates warns on US immigration curbs

Bill Gates, the chairman of Micro­soft, on Wednesday warned that restrictions on the number of skilled workers allowed to enter the US put the country’s competitiveness at risk.

The comments marked the latest attack on restrictive US immigration policies by the technology industry, which is facing a shortage of skilled workers even as demand for their skills is increasing.

Speaking before the Senate committee on health, education, labour and pensions, Mr Gates said that tighter US immigration policies – governed partly by concerns over terrorism – were “driving away the world’s best and brightest precisely when we need them most”.

“It makes no sense to tell well-trained, highly skilled individuals, many of whom are educated at our top colleges and universities, that the United States does not welcome or value them,” Mr Gates said. “America will find it infinitely more difficult to maintain its technological leadership if it shuts out the very people who are most able to help us compete.”

Mr Gates said that other countries were taking advantage of restrictive US policies by catering to highly skilled workers who would otherwise choose to study, live and work in the US.

“Our lost opportunities are their gains,” he said. “I personally witness the ill effects of these policies on an almost daily basis at Microsoft.”

Mr Gates’s comments on immigration were part of a broader warning over the state of US competitiveness.

Mr Gates said he felt “deep anxiety” about the US’s ability to remain competitive if it did not act quickly to improve education, invest in basic science research, and reform its immigration ­policies.

“America cannot maintain its innovation leadership if it does not educate world-class innovators and train its workforce to use innovations effectively. Unfort­unately, available data suggest that we are failing to do so……….especially in our high schools.”

Mr Gates called on Congress to loosen rules that prevent many foreign students from settling once their studies in the US are complete. He also suggested that Congress speed the process of obtaining permanent resident status for highly skilled workers.

Immigration reform emerged as a key issue among voters in last year’s mid-term elections. However, most of the debate has focused on illegal immigration and whether the US should ­create a guest worker programme for low-skilled immigrants.

The US currently limits visas for skilled foreign workers to 65,000 a year, while the number of green cards, required for permanent resident status is limited to 140,000 a year.

Mr Gates ack­now­ledged concerns over US job losses resulting from immigration but sought to distinguish between the need to encourage more highly skilled workers to enter the US and the broader debate on immigration reform.

“These reforms do not pit US workers against those foreign born,” he said. “Far from displacing US workers, highly skilled foreign-born workers will continue to function as they always have: as job creators.”

source Financial times

25. February 2007

Free webhosting at @wiki with no ads.

I , today , made an account in @wiki. its cool service and wiki style. (remember wikipaedia) you can make you pesonal webpages without knowing much of HTML and CSS .Its really simple to use and at the top of that you can even put Google Adsense in the page ( well per page 2 adsense .. one is from @wiki itself coz only 3 adsense ads can be displayed in a single page) . with some deeper investigation i hope the one ad from @wiki can also be removed to put your own ad i guess..

you can check my blog preview in my @wiki site by clicking here

from their site

What is @Wiki?

@Wiki is FREE wiki hosting service.

You can publish anything instantly and multiple people can edit your content.

You can use a wiki to keep notes and share ideas among a group of people

Why @Wiki?
A lot of features!

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* Instant publishing and Multiple authors
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* RSS feeds

20. February 2007

Meet Yourself at the Osho Meditation Resort

I read this article in TrendHunter.com . Specially putting it here coz Koregaon park is the place where i live in India

Travel so far to be so close to you under a luxury environment doing the most simple things of this life, sing, play, dance and talk with yourself where everybody is friendly.

“Welcome to this beautiful campus situated in the pleasant residential area of Koregaon Park, Pune, India, some fifteen minutes by air from Mumbai (formerly Bombay).This lush contemporary 40-acre campus is a tropical oasis where nature and the 21st Century blend seamlessly, both within and without. With its white marble pathways, elegant black buildings, abundant foliage and Olympic-sized swimming pool, it is the perfect setting to take time out for yourself.This is a place where you can simply relax and where you can also enjoy the company of visitors of all ages from over 100 countries. You can choose if you want to do something, or if you just want to rest, swim, meditate — or just to be.You can learn simple Osho Active Meditations, techniques specifically designed for the contemporary over-charged mind and stress-impacted body.You may like to nourish your body-mind-soul with a stunning selection of individual sessions, like bodywork and massage, and longer workshops and corses — all designed to help you become more aware of yourself.

Or perhaps experiment by learning new life skills and acquiring tools to take home, that will help you remain relaxed even in the busiest of workaday environments.The key to relaxation is awareness, being a keen observer of all that is going on both inside and around us — this is the inner science, often also called meditation.And while we each walk this walk alone, it is more supportive and more fun to share the process with others, whether during the various daytime activities, or in the evening — trying out a new meditation technique, or enjoying an evening a party, dancing, or the plaza café, watching or participating in live theater events or just going to the movies.Above all this is a unique environment created through the awareness, humor, and celebration that each of us brings to the table.”

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