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Thursday, 23 August 2012

Crystals may lower cost of Cloud Computing


A team of organic chemists discovered they could create very long crystals with desirable properties using just two small organic molecules that are extremely attracted to each other.
The attraction between the two molecules causes them to self assemble into an ordered network—order that is needed for a material to be ferroelectric.
Straight from the Source


The starting compounds are simple and inexpensive, making the lightweight materials scalable and very promising for technology applications. In contrast, conventional ferroelectric materials—special varieties of polymers and ceramics—are complex and expensive to produce. The new materials can be made quickly and are very versatile.
In addition to computer memory, the discovery of the Northwestern materials could potentially improve sensing devices, solar energy systems, and nanoelectronics. The study is published August 23 in Nature.
“This work will serve as a guide for designing these materials and using ferroelectricity in new ways,” says Samuel I. Stupp, professor of chemistry, materials science and engineering, and medicine. He is a senior author of the paper.
“Our molecular design enables us to invent a nearly infinite library of ferroelectric materials.”
Ferroelectric materials exhibit spontaneous electric polarization—making one side of the material positive and the opposite side negative—that can be reversed by the application of an electric field (from a battery, for example). These two possible orientations make the materials attractive to researchers developing computer memory because one orientation could correspond to a 1 and the other to a 0.
“The material’s behavior is complex, but the superstructure is simple,” says Sir Fraser Stoddart, professor of chemistry in the Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences at Northwestern and a senior author of the paper. “It is the superstructure that gives the material its desirable properties.”
The two first authors of the paper are Alok Tayi, a former graduate student in Stupp’s lab and now a postdoctoral fellow at Harvard University, and Alexander Shveyd, a former graduate student in Stoddart’s lab and now a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Rochester.


Cloud costs

These new supramolecular materials derive their properties from the specific interaction, repeated over and over again between two small alternating organic molecules, not from the molecules themselves. The two complementary molecules interact electronically and so strongly that they come close together and form very long crystals. This highly ordered 3D network is based on hydrogen bonds.
In particular, the materials could help address the very expensive upkeep of cloud computing. Facebook, Google, Web-based email, and other services are stored in the cloud and rely on volatile memory. When the power is turned off, volatile memory forgets the information it’s holding. So the power has to be kept on.
The new ferroelectric materials could be developed into non-volatile memory. With this type of memory, if the power is turned off, the information is retained. If the cloud and electronic devices operated on non-volatile memory, $6 billion in electricity costs would be saved in the US annually, the researchers say.
Current non-volatile computer memories are not based on ferroelectrics. But ferroelectric memories promise to consume less power, last longer, and capture data faster than conventional non-volatile memories.
Key in a lock
As so often happens in science, serendipity played a role in this discovery of super long crystals. Shveyd was trying to make boxlike molecular rings, but this outcome was never observed. Instead, he stumbled upon the interesting crystals.
“This discovery effectively opened up a Pandora’s box,” Stoddart says. “Alex started working with Alok in Stupp’s group, and the two of them took advantage of the interactions between the two building blocks. They optimized the design so they could grow very long crystals with ferroelectric properties.”
“The interaction between the molecules is very strong—almost like a key in a lock,” Shveyd says. “They fit very well together. This interaction produces ferroelectricity, which, to our great surprise, happened at room temperature.”
This type of interaction between two molecules previously had been found to give rise to ferroelectricity in three other materials but only below liquid nitrogen temperatures. The new materials developed at Northwestern include additional interactions that enable this property to occur for the first time at room temperature and above.
The new material is all about electron exchange between two small molecules. One molecule is the donor of electrons (red), and the other is the acceptor of electrons (blue). The red and blue molecules are arranged in a mixed stack, and one type alternates with the other.
Within that network, each molecule partners with a neighbor and exchanges electrons. Then an electric field is applied, prompting the molecules to switch partners, like dancers on a dance floor. This switch of partners produces ferroelectricity.
The research team developed a library of 10 complexes with this architecture. Three are reported in the Nature paper. The crystals are based on complexes between a pyromellitic diimide-acceptor and donors that are derivatives of naphthalene, pyrene, and tetrathiafulvalene.
“The simplicity of our system demonstrates how self-assembly can endow materials with novel functions,” Tayi says. “We hope our work motivates chemists and engineers to explore ferroelectricity in organic materials.”



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Cloud adviser: Contract for functionality, not a brand
Computerworld Australia
Before buying a cloud computing service, you evaluate it, test it, see it in action, so you know what it's supposed to accomplish for you, right? Well, a description of that functionality belongs in the contract. You'd be amazed at how many contracts ...
See all stories on this topic »
Is cloud computing hot air? Comprehend Systems shoots the breeze with OSP.
OutSourcing-Pharma.com
What does cloud computing mean to the pharmaceutical and biotech industry? Broadly, cloud computing means setting all the processing and power externally so that your data is stored virtually. The big advantages include being able to scale the system ...
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OutSourcing-Pharma.com
Piston Jumps on 'Freemium' Cloud Bandwagon
Computerworld India
Piston Cloud Computing -- which bills itself as the OpenStack enterprise company -- is the latest cloud vendor to offer a free or low-cost version of its software for customer trials and proofs of concepts. Piston Cloud Computing -- which bills itself ...
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HP earnings: 6 lowlights
GigaOM
It's slow going for the HP turnaround Meg Whitman is trying to engineer. There's softness in the PC business, in printers, in servers — just more bad news atop the $8 billion write-down of enterprise services that HP pre-announced. Not a pretty picture.
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GigaOM
Ramco Systems enters Australia to drive business
Moneycontrol.com
Thu, Aug 23, 2012 at 16:05. Ramco Systems enters Australia to drive business. Software firm Ramco Systems, focused on cloud computing platform, today said it has set up a wholly-owned subsidiary in Australia to drive growth in new markets. Source: PTI ...
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How cloud computing is impacting enterprise Java developers
TheServerSide.com
Will there will be no end to the media hype surrounding cloud computing? Every day a new press release touts the remarkable service provided by some previously unknown PaaS provider, or an article or research study comes out that trumpets the ...
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'The Cloud' Poses Tax Questions For Mass.
WBUR
BOSTON — As consumers and businesses turn to computing in “the cloud” to store data or crunch numbers, cloud-based companies — and states — are beginning to wonder: Can you tax that? Massachusetts officials are starting to provide some answers.
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Rackspace investment to boost NSW jobs
The Australian
The cloud computing firm is poised to end the year with around 25 staff, Mr Randall said. It offers web hosting services to the likes of Pacific Brands, Kogan, Lonely Planet, Treasury Wine Estates, Webjet, and News Limited, publisher of The Australian.
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Crystals may lower cost of cloud computing
Futurity: Research News
In particular, the materials could help address the very expensive upkeep of cloud computing. Facebook, Google, Web-based email, and other services are stored in the cloud and rely on volatile memory. When the power is turned off, volatile memory ...
See all stories on this topic »
Q&A: Adrian Gardner, CIO, NASA Goddard Flight Center
SmartPlanet.com (blog)
That's why the space agency has been aggressively adopting the cloud model – both from within its own data centers and with outside partners – to increase its computing power. NASA provided the genesis for the open-source cloud platform, OpenStack, ...
See all stories on this topic »


926 bank branches accepting advance Income Tax




Mumbai, In a bid to make tax filing easier, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) Wednesday directed 926 branches of public and private sector banks in Mumbai to accept advance income tax.




Of the 926 bank branches, 862 branches are public sector bank branches, the RBI said in a statement.
Of the private sector bank branches, 35 are of HDFC bank, 10 of ICICI Bank and 19 of AXIS Bank.
The Reserve Bank of India has advised income tax assessees to take advantage of these standing arrangements made for their convenience.



"Long queues and inconveniences can be avoided at the Reserve Bank of India counters if the assessees in Mumbai and Navi Mumbai utilise the services being made available at various designated branches of banks and deposit their income tax dues well in advance of the last date," the RBI said.
"These arrangements have been made for the convenience of the income tax assessees," it said.



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Ankita Mishra [ B Sc (CS) MBA (Mktg)]
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Ruchika Mandore [ BCA ]





Lucas Moura could have gone to Inter for €25m






Lucas Moura's agent has revealed that his client could have been sold to Inter for €25 million earlier this summer.

The Brazilian winger eventually agreed a reported €44.5 million transfer to Ligue 1 side Paris Saint-Germain, which will go through in January 2013, ending a drawn-out saga involving the Nerazzurri, Les Parisiens and Manchester United.

However, the player's representative has now revealed that the 20-year-old could have sealed a move to Milan, before also agreeing a move to England as PSG's interest began to materialise.

"If Lucas had forced Sao Paulo's hand, then he would've been sold to Inter for €25m several weeks ago," his representative Wagner Ribeiro told Bom Dia.

"After he said no to Inter, Sao Paulo had agreed a deal with Manchester United for €36m. However, then Leonardo's proposal from PSG arrived."

Moura featured and scored in the club's 3-0 Serie A win over Ponte Preta on Saturday night.









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Ankita Mishra [ B Sc (CS) MBA (Mktg)]
AnkitaM@aerosoftorg.in

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WORLD'S WORST EVER Recession almost HIT


 .......... INDIA
Recession   Recession   Recession   Recession  ............................



Britain faces worst recession since 1930s

Britain is back in recession. According to the Office for National Statistics (ONS), the economy shrank by 0.2 percent over the first three months of 2012, following a 0.3 percent contraction at the end of 2011. It has now entered a double-dip recession, the first since the 1970s.
The British economy has flat-lined, showing zero growth over 12 months, joining euro zone members Greece, Portugal, Slovenia, Italy, the Netherlands, Belgium and Spain in an official recession.
Commenting on the figures, the ONS states, “The economy is weaker relative to its pre-recession peak than at the corresponding stage of the depression in the early 1930s”.

This view is shared by other finance experts. According to Michael Saunders, an economist at Citigroup, Britain is experiencing “the deepest recession and weakest recovery for 100 years”.
The economy has only recovered less than half the output lost in the 2008-2009 recession, and four of the last six quarters have shown negative growth. Production was down in January and February, and is 3 percent lower than the same time in 2011. The ONS points to the “weakness of the global economy, especially the euro zone,” as the main factors impacting negatively on the UK.
The service sector, which accounts for three quarters of output, has only seen “modest growth”, with three of its four main sub-sectors contracting in January and February. Business and financial services—towering over all other service sub-sectors—contracted in February, recording only 0.1 percent growth over the quarter.
The situation would have been worse without the contrived “fuel crisis” sparking panic buying in March and bumping up petrol sales by 4.9 percent.
Construction has contracted by nearly 5 percent, continuing a downward trend since 2010 when the sector briefly returned to positive growth after crumpling following the 2008 crash. This has impacted on the economy as a whole, beyond the immediate size of the sector that currently employs some 2 million, down from a peak of 2.37 million in 2008. Despite a dire shortage of accommodation for families and singles on average and low incomes, house building fell in 2011, as did other areas of construction hit by the government’s squeeze on public sector capital projects.
British exports are down, particularly to the euro zone. The United States, Britain’s biggest single country export market, accounts for almost half of the fall in exports to non-EU countries.
For workers, the experience of the last year has been of growing poverty and hardship. Wages and salaries have fallen again, as the annual rate of earnings growth of 1.1 percent was less than half the rate of inflation at 3.5 percent. This is an underestimation, as it is calculated using the government’s favoured Consumer Prices Index that usually produces a lower figure. The situation of those on lower incomes is much worse, as relatively greater spending on food, fuel and other basic necessities skews inflation upward for those at the bottom.
A study by ONS, “The impact of the recession on household income, expenditure and saving”, finds that the financial crisis and recession of 2008-2009 and poor economic situation since then have had “a significant impact on the financial position of households”.
Figures show that while food prices have risen continually since 2008, the volume of food and non-alcoholic beverages purchased has fallen. This is no surprise given that since 2009, five out of eight quarters have seen a decline in real household disposable income.
This is already translating into growing malnutrition, particularly among children. According to a recent study by youth charity The Prince’s Trust, half of secondary school teachers surveyed regularly encounter pupils suffering from malnutrition, with some admitting they frequently buy food for struggling pupils from their own wages.
Official unemployment has fallen marginally over the year. But this masks the fact that while part-time working (at minimum or just above minimum wage) has risen, the number in full-time work has dropped. Longer term unemployment, those out of work for 12 months or more, has increased.
The government blames the euro crisis for the return of the recession, which is “dragging down” the British economy. Prime Minister David Cameron’s response was that it must be made easier for business to employ people in Britain. What this means is that wages and social costs should be pushed down even further, and sacking people made easier through abolishing already minimal employment protection rights in the name of labour market “flexibility”.
Chancellor George Osborne was adamant that the government must maintain its austerity measures so that Britain does not lose its AAA credit rating.
For the Labour Party, Shadow Chancellor Ed Balls claims that the consensus is changing across Europe, away from spending cuts. But in reality Labour agrees with imposing the burden of the crisis onto the backs of working people—as can be seen up and down the country in Labour-controlled local authorities, where workers have been sacked and much needed services cut.
In January, Labour leader Ed Miliband pledged that a Labour government would adhere to “tough new fiscal rules”. For his part, Ed Balls has refused to promise to reverse the government’s public spending cuts. Speaking on Newsnight at the end of last year, he said the government was cutting “too far and too fast” but that Labour had to be “realistic” when dealing with the economic crisis.
One thing is certain: the cuts are only just beginning. In its 2010 Spending Review, the Conservative-Liberal Democrat government announced proposals to cut public spending by £81 billion by 2014-15. Ninety percent of these cuts—£77 billion—have yet to come into effect.
In addition, the Centre for Economics and Business Research has calculated that the onset of double-dip recession will leave the government facing a black hole in its budget of £170 billion between now and 2016-17, based on present cuts in spending. This is being used in order to argue for further cuts

With the worst Coal Scam , 2G SCAM and cancellation of several telecom licenses we NEED to be VERY CAREFUL about our career.

See facts:
2 February 2012: The Supreme court of India cancelled all 122 licenses allotted by A Raja and imposed Rs 5 crore(US$ 1,018,122) fine on Unitech, Swan and Tata Teleservices. It also imposed a fine of Rs 50 lakh on Loop Telecom Pvt Ltd, S-Tel, Allianz Infratech and Sistema Shyam Tele Services Ltd.

After effects of Supreme Court's verdict:
Batelco quits India - Batelco, the Bahrain telecommunications company holding 42.7% stake in S Tel declared that it has agreed to sell its entire holding to Indian partner Sky City Foundation Ltd for 65.8 million Bahraini dinar ($174.5 million).

Telenor terminates agreement and sues Unitech - On 21 February 2012 Telenor, majority stakeholder in Uninor, terminated its agreement with its Indian partner Unitech and sued it seeking “indemnity and compensation”.

Etisalat sues Shahid Balwa and Vinod Goenka - On 23 February 2012 Etisalat of the Etasalat-DB Telecom sued Shahid Balwa and Vinod Goenka, promoters of its Indian partner DB Realty for fraud and misrepresentation.


Effected Sectors / Companies:
Mobile 2G Service Provider Companies
Unitech Wireless -- 22 licences
Loop Telecom Private Ltd -- 21 licences
Videocon Telecommunications -- 21 licences
Etisalat Db Telecom Private Ltd -- 15 licences
S Tel Ltd -- 6 licences
Sistema Shyam Teleservices -- 21 licences
Idea Cellular -- 13 licences
Tata Teleservices -- 3 licences

Handset Companies....ALL MOST ALL
Financier Banks....ALL MOST ALL
Telecom Tower Companies....ALL MOST ALL
Other Related Companies....ALL MOST ALL 


Politicians and FIIs has made every sector and Industry into drastic situation,this is the only reason of Recession and Increasing rates of unemployment.




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anubha.barod@aerosoftseo.com

Best Manager Marketing in Asia  :
Ankita Mishra [ B Sc (CS) MBA (Mktg)]
AnkitaM@aerosoftorg.in

Best Aviation Software Engineer Cum Aviation Blogger in Asia:
Ruchika Mandore [ BCA ]





  1. The Worst Economic Recovery Since The Great Depression - Forbes

    www.forbes.com/.../the-worst-economic-recovery-since-the...
  2. Britain faces worst recession since 1930s - World Socialist Web Site

    www.wsws.org/articles/2012/may2012/ukec-m05.shtml
    5 May 2012 – The British economy has flat-lined, showing zero growth over the last year.
  3. The worst recession? - Washington Times

    www.washingtontimes.com/news/2009/oct/14/the-worst-recession/
    14 Oct 2009 – Is the current recession the worst since the Great Depression? ... At the end of World War II, from 1945 to 1946, there was a very sharp drop in ...
  4. 2007–2012 global financial crisis - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2007–2012_global_financial_crisis
    (Countries in brown were in recession.) .... If the world economy does not improve, many economists fear sovereign default is a real .... The worst loans were originated in 2004–2007, the years of the most intense competition between ...
  5. 2008–2012 global recession - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2008–2012_global_recession
    The present recession is shaping up to be the worst post-World War II contraction on record: Real gross domestic product (GDP) began contracting in the third ...
  6. Abercrombie & Fitch: World's Worst Recession Brand? - TIME

    www.time.com/time/business/article/0,8599,1918160,00.html
    25 Aug 2009 – The high-end teen retailer kept prices high and failed to innovate during the Great Recession.
  7. Why this is the worst recession, not a depression - Mar. 25, 2009

    money.cnn.com/2009/03/25/news/.../depression_comparisons/
    25 Mar 2009 – And a 3.4% drop would be the worst since World War II, and far worsethan the average recession in that period. Still, that's a long way from the ...
  8. Greece heading for worst recession? - BBC

    www.bbc.co.uk/today/hi/today/newsid_9744000/9744445.stm
    14 Aug 2012 – ... is contracting at an annual rate of 6.2% and the slump is now in its fifth year as the nation could be heading towards its worst recession.

Guard of Sea Life, Armed With Pen, Brush and colors




Richard Ellis was playing tennis in Little Compton, R.I., during the summer of “Jaws” when he got a call from fishermen in nearby Sakonnet. They had a dead shark. Would he like to come down to the pier?

Mr. Ellis, a painter and aspiring naturalist who had designed exhibits for the American Museum of Natural History, including its iconic blue whale, hesitated. He already had lots of material for a book he was writing about sharks. The big fish was probably just a sandbar shark, or a blue.

But down he went — and immediately recognized a baby white shark, a perfect miniature of one of nature’s great killing machines.

In 1975, scientists knew remarkably little about great whites, adult or juvenile. But the blockbuster movie had conjured up a stealthy monster with an appetite for human flesh, and a nation of beachgoers had suddenly gone queasy.

“Where’s its mother?” people on the pier asked nervously.

Mr. Ellis alerted his scientist friends at the National Marine Fisheries Service in Narragansett to the discovery and flipped the four-foot baby on its back to expose its belly. The marine scientists wanted it opened up so they could learn about the stomach contents as a way of better understanding the feeding habits of baby whites.

The episode illustrates the tenacity Mr. Ellis has brought to a lifetime of championing — and often demythologizing — marine life. No advanced degrees have aided this ambition, nor courses in writing or painting. His career is rooted in pluck and curiosity.

To date, he has written two dozen books on sea creatures, and has three more under way. His first, “The Book of Sharks” (Grosset & Dunlap, 1975), features the dissection of the baby white.

“He’s remarkable,” said John E. McCosker, chairman of aquatic biology at the California Academy of Sciences and co-author of a shark book with Mr. Ellis. He praised the naturalist as a gift to the public appreciation of science.

“He can handle an overwhelming amount of information,” Dr. McCosker said. “And he’s persistent. You can’t say no to him.”

Countering Misconceptions

Mr. Ellis’s build is athletic and his eyes are steady — he is a man who has seen a lot while conducting research in all the world’s oceans and scores of locations, from Patagonia to the Faroe Islands. He seems to prefer standing or moving to sitting. Most of all, he likes to talk. His speech is purposeful and full of rhythm when emphasizing a point.

At his home on the West Side of Manhattan, Mr. Ellis — a New Yorker for most of his 74 years — recently reflected on his life as well as some of the characters he has encountered. He called Peter Benchley, the author of “Jaws,” who died in 2006, a good friend, though he deplored his demonization of sharks.

“I love these animals,” Mr. Ellis said in his study. “I don’t want them maligned. I don’t want them killed. I don’t want them misunderstood. And it became my job, my passion, to eliminate the misunderstandings.”

In the interview, he elaborated on his goals. He wrote the books, he said, “because I believed that if people understood the life, the importance, the habits of these creatures — whether sharks or whales or manatees — they would acquire a reverence.

“I do it so people will say, ‘Wow, I didn’t know that’ or ‘Isn’t that cool! Look at what octopuses can do!’ ”

He rifled though his desk.

“Here,” Mr. Ellis said, picking up a scientific article with the title “Underwater Bipedal Locomotion by Octopuses in Disguise.” He laughed.

“The octopus puts a coconut shell on top of itself and walks on two of its eight legs,” Mr. Ellis said, disbelieving.


As for sharks, he argued that they have far more important things to do than to terrorize humans. “If they really ate people,” he said, “no beach on earth would be safe.”

Mr. Ellis’s home study bears no displays of shark teeth or jaws, but it does have mammal skulls, primitive masks and — amazingly, given their rarity — a narwhal tusk.

The spiraled tusks once sold for many times their weight in gold because of their reputation as unicorn horns. In his writings, Mr. Ellis identifies them as the ivory teeth of stocky whales and celebrates them as among the most beautiful objects in nature. He said he got this one from a veterinarian, in exchange for a painting.




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anubha.barod@aerosoftseo.com

Best Manager Marketing in Asia  :
Ankita Mishra [ B Sc (CS) MBA (Mktg)]
AnkitaM@aerosoftorg.in

Best Aviation Software Engineer Cum Aviation Blogger in Asia:
Ruchika Mandore [ BCA ]





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